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Impact of diabetes on COVID‐19 mortality and hospital outcomes from a global perspective: An umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis

INTRODUCTION: To date, COVID‐19 has claimed 4.9 million lives. Diabetes has been identified as an independent risk factor of serious outcomes in people with COVID‐19 infection. Whether that holds true across world regions uniformly has not been previously assessed. METHODS: This study offers the fir...

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Autores principales: Kastora, Stavroula, Patel, Manisha, Carter, Ben, Delibegovic, Mirela, Myint, Phyo Kyaw
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9094465/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35441801
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/edm2.338
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author Kastora, Stavroula
Patel, Manisha
Carter, Ben
Delibegovic, Mirela
Myint, Phyo Kyaw
author_facet Kastora, Stavroula
Patel, Manisha
Carter, Ben
Delibegovic, Mirela
Myint, Phyo Kyaw
author_sort Kastora, Stavroula
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: To date, COVID‐19 has claimed 4.9 million lives. Diabetes has been identified as an independent risk factor of serious outcomes in people with COVID‐19 infection. Whether that holds true across world regions uniformly has not been previously assessed. METHODS: This study offers the first umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis to analyse the collective and geographically stratified mortality, ICU admission, ventilation requirement, illness severity and discharge rate amongst patients with diabetes. Five databases (EMBASE, MEDLINE, CAB Abstracts, PsychInfo and Web of Science) and 3 additional sources (SSRN's eLibrary, Research Square and MedRxiv) were searched from inception to 30 August 2021. Prospective and retrospective cohort studies, reporting the association between diabetes and one or more COVID‐19 hospitalization outcomes, were included. This meta‐analysis was registered on PROSPERO, CRD42021278579. Abbreviated MeSH terms used for search were as follows: (Diabetes) AND (2019 Novel Coronavirus Disease), adapted per database requirements. Exclusion criteria exclusion criteria were as follows: (1) none of the primary or secondary outcomes of meta‐analysis reported, (2) no confirmed COVID‐19 infection (laboratory or clinical) and (3) no unexposed population (solely patients with diabetes included). Quality of the included studies were assessed using the Newcastle‐Ottawa Scale (NOS) whilst quality of evidence by the GRADE framework. Studies that were clinically homogeneous were pooled. Summative data and heterogeneity were generated by the Cochrane platform RevMan (V. 5.4). RESULTS: Overall, 158 observational studies were included, with a total of 270,212 of participants, median age 59 [53–65 IQR] of who 56.5% were male. A total of 22 studies originated from EU, 90 from Far East, 16 from Middle East and 30 from America. Data were synthesized with mixed heterogeneity across outcomes. Pooled results highlighted those patients with diabetes were at a higher risk of COVID‐19‐related mortality, OR 1.87 [95%CI 1.61, 2.17]. ICU admissions increased across all studies for patients with diabetes, OR 1.59 [95%CI 1.15, 2.18], a result that was mainly skewed by Far East‐originating studies, OR 1.94 [95%CI 1.51, 2.49]. Ventilation requirements were also increased amongst patients with diabetes worldwide, OR 1.44 [95%CI 1.20, 1.73] as well as their presentation with severe or critical condition, OR 2.88 [95%CI 2.29, 3.63]. HbA1C levels under <70 mmol and metformin use constituted protective factors in view of COVID‐19 mortality, whilst the inverse was true for concurrent insulin use. CONCLUSIONS: Whilst diabetes constitutes a poor prognosticator for various COVID‐19 infection outcomes, variability across world regions is significant and may skew overall trends.
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spelling pubmed-90944652022-05-17 Impact of diabetes on COVID‐19 mortality and hospital outcomes from a global perspective: An umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis Kastora, Stavroula Patel, Manisha Carter, Ben Delibegovic, Mirela Myint, Phyo Kyaw Endocrinol Diabetes Metab Review Article INTRODUCTION: To date, COVID‐19 has claimed 4.9 million lives. Diabetes has been identified as an independent risk factor of serious outcomes in people with COVID‐19 infection. Whether that holds true across world regions uniformly has not been previously assessed. METHODS: This study offers the first umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis to analyse the collective and geographically stratified mortality, ICU admission, ventilation requirement, illness severity and discharge rate amongst patients with diabetes. Five databases (EMBASE, MEDLINE, CAB Abstracts, PsychInfo and Web of Science) and 3 additional sources (SSRN's eLibrary, Research Square and MedRxiv) were searched from inception to 30 August 2021. Prospective and retrospective cohort studies, reporting the association between diabetes and one or more COVID‐19 hospitalization outcomes, were included. This meta‐analysis was registered on PROSPERO, CRD42021278579. Abbreviated MeSH terms used for search were as follows: (Diabetes) AND (2019 Novel Coronavirus Disease), adapted per database requirements. Exclusion criteria exclusion criteria were as follows: (1) none of the primary or secondary outcomes of meta‐analysis reported, (2) no confirmed COVID‐19 infection (laboratory or clinical) and (3) no unexposed population (solely patients with diabetes included). Quality of the included studies were assessed using the Newcastle‐Ottawa Scale (NOS) whilst quality of evidence by the GRADE framework. Studies that were clinically homogeneous were pooled. Summative data and heterogeneity were generated by the Cochrane platform RevMan (V. 5.4). RESULTS: Overall, 158 observational studies were included, with a total of 270,212 of participants, median age 59 [53–65 IQR] of who 56.5% were male. A total of 22 studies originated from EU, 90 from Far East, 16 from Middle East and 30 from America. Data were synthesized with mixed heterogeneity across outcomes. Pooled results highlighted those patients with diabetes were at a higher risk of COVID‐19‐related mortality, OR 1.87 [95%CI 1.61, 2.17]. ICU admissions increased across all studies for patients with diabetes, OR 1.59 [95%CI 1.15, 2.18], a result that was mainly skewed by Far East‐originating studies, OR 1.94 [95%CI 1.51, 2.49]. Ventilation requirements were also increased amongst patients with diabetes worldwide, OR 1.44 [95%CI 1.20, 1.73] as well as their presentation with severe or critical condition, OR 2.88 [95%CI 2.29, 3.63]. HbA1C levels under <70 mmol and metformin use constituted protective factors in view of COVID‐19 mortality, whilst the inverse was true for concurrent insulin use. CONCLUSIONS: Whilst diabetes constitutes a poor prognosticator for various COVID‐19 infection outcomes, variability across world regions is significant and may skew overall trends. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-04-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9094465/ /pubmed/35441801 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/edm2.338 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Kastora, Stavroula
Patel, Manisha
Carter, Ben
Delibegovic, Mirela
Myint, Phyo Kyaw
Impact of diabetes on COVID‐19 mortality and hospital outcomes from a global perspective: An umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis
title Impact of diabetes on COVID‐19 mortality and hospital outcomes from a global perspective: An umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis
title_full Impact of diabetes on COVID‐19 mortality and hospital outcomes from a global perspective: An umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis
title_fullStr Impact of diabetes on COVID‐19 mortality and hospital outcomes from a global perspective: An umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis
title_full_unstemmed Impact of diabetes on COVID‐19 mortality and hospital outcomes from a global perspective: An umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis
title_short Impact of diabetes on COVID‐19 mortality and hospital outcomes from a global perspective: An umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis
title_sort impact of diabetes on covid‐19 mortality and hospital outcomes from a global perspective: an umbrella systematic review and meta‐analysis
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9094465/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35441801
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/edm2.338
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