학술논문

1090-P: Diabetes in Japanese COVID-19 Patients as the Primary Factor of Accelerated Progression to Severe State.
Document Type
Article
Source
Diabetes. 2021 Supplement 1, Vol. 70, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Subject
Language
ISSN
0012-1797
Abstract
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Japanese victims number less than in other countries, perhaps due to gene specifics, aspects of Japanese lifestyle and coagulation system characteristics typically less potent in Japanese than in Caucasians. The Osaka prefectural government stratified patients into mild, moderate and severe, distributing them amongst various alternative accommodation to relieve overburdened hospitals. Hospitalized patients were managed based on national government guidelines. Focusing on moderate patients, i.e., whose oxygen saturation levels were favorable even if presenting characteristics in computed tomography, we conducted a retrospective analysis in type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients compared with a control. Of a study total of 102 patients (male 51%, aged 62.2±16.0, BMI 27.6±5.2), 49% were T2D patients (aged 71.2±13.8, A1c 6.8±1.3%, BMI 24.5±5.2). Twenty-five patients (24.5%) moved to the severe classification. Eighteen patients (17.6%) (aged 74.8±8.6, A1c 6.9±1.0%, BMI 24.3±2.5), of whom 88.9% had T2D (aged 76.1±10.2, A1c 6.7±1.1%, BMI 23.8±10.2), were ventilated and transferred to another hospital for advanced treatment. Seven patients (6.9%), of whom 71.4% had T2D, died (aged 85±3.4) after ventilation was declined by the families due to advanced age and dementia. One scleroderma patient on home oxygen therapy for intestinal pneumonia died of sudden respiratory failure. Twenty-five diabetes patients (24.5%) improved. No significant correlation exists between hypertension, body mass index, lung disease, renal failure and receiving insulin therapy. In our study, 88% of moderate patients moving to the severe classification had T2D. In Japanese, diabetes may constitute a much larger risk factor than those factors identified in other countries in the evolution of COVID-19 patients from the moderate to severe classifications. A more comprehensive study is needed. BMI: body mass index, A1c: hemoglobin A1c. Disclosure: S. Kaneko: Advisory Panel; Self; Novo Nordisk Pharma Ltd., Consultant; Self; Novo Nordisk Pharma Ltd., Research Support; Self; Eli Lilly Japan K. K., Novo Nordisk Pharma Ltd., Speaker's Bureau; Self; AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly Japan K. K., Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma Corporation, Nippon Boehringer Ingelheim Co. Ltd., Novo Nordisk Pharma Ltd., Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma Co., Ltd. H. Kita: None. K. Motohashi: None. S. Tokumoto: None. U. Yoko: None. H. Eguchi: None. I. Tsunematsu: None. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]