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. 2021 Jun 1:dgab393. doi: 10.1210/clinem/dgab393

Diabetes increases severe COVID-19 outcomes primarily in younger adults Age and diabetes in COVID-19 severity

Marc Diedisheim 1,2, Etienne Dancoisne 3,4, Jean-François Gautier 1,5, Etienne Larger 2, Emmanuel Cosson 6,7, Bruno Fève 8, Philippe Chanson 9, Sébastien Czernichow 10, Sopio Tatulashvili 11, Marie-Laure Raffin-Sanson 12, Muriel Bourgeon 13, Christiane Ajzenberg 14, Agnès Hartemann 15, Christel Daniel 3,16, Thomas Moreau 17, Ronan Roussel 1,18, Louis Potier 1,18,
PMCID: PMC8195170  PMID: 34406396

Abstract

Context

Diabetes is reported as a risk factor for severe COVID-19, but whether this risk is similar in all categories of age remains unclear.

Objective

To investigate the risk of severe COVID-19 outcomes in hospitalized patients with and without diabetes according to age categories.

Design Setting and Participants

We conducted a retrospective observational cohort study of 6,314 consecutive patients hospitalized for COVID-19 between February and June 30 2020, and follow-up recorded until 30 September 2020, in the Paris metropolitan area, France.

Main Outcome Measure(s)

The main outcome was a composite outcome of mortality and orotracheal intubation in subjects with diabetes compared with subjects without diabetes, after adjustment for confounding variables and according to age categories.

Results

Diabetes was recorded in 39% of subjects. Main outcome was higher in patients with diabetes, independently of confounding variables (HR 1.13 [1.03-1.24]) and increased with age in individuals without diabetes, from 23% for those <50 to 35% for those >80 years but reached a plateau after 70 in those with diabetes. In direct comparison between patients with and without diabetes, diabetes-associated risk was inversely proportional to age, highest in <50 and similar after 70 years. Similarly, mortality was higher in patients with diabetes (26%) than in those without diabetes (22%, p<0.001), but adjusted HR for diabetes was significant only in patients under 50 (HR 1.81 [1.14-2.87]).

Conclusions

Diabetes should be considered as an independent risk factor for the severity of COVID-19 in young adults more so than in older adults, especially for individuals younger than 70 years.

Keywords: diabetes, covid-19, mortality, age


Articles from The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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