Author: Alonso, Guy Todd; Ebekozien, Osagie; Gallagher, Mary Pat; Rompicherla, Saketh; Lyons, Sarah K.; Choudhary, Abha; Majidi, Shideh; Pinnaro, Catherina T.; Balachandar, Sadana; Gangat, Mariam; Curda Roberts, Alissa Jeanne; Marks, Brynn E.; Creo, Ana; Sanchez, Janine; Seeherunvong, Tossaporn; Jimenezâ€Vega, Jose; Patel, Neha S.; Wood, Jamie R.; Gabriel, Liana; Sumpter, Kathryn M.; Wilkes, Meredith; Rapaport, Robert; Cymbaluk, Anna; Wong, Jenise C.; Sanda, Srinath; Albaneseâ€O'neill, Anastasia
Title: Diabetic ketoacidosis drives COVIDâ€19 related hospitalizations in children with type 1 diabetes Cord-id: r11u4me4 Document date: 2021_4_27
ID: r11u4me4
Snippet: BACKGROUND: Diabetes is a risk factor for poor COVIDâ€19 outcomes, but pediatric patients with type 1 diabetes are poorly represented in current studies. METHODS: T1D Exchange coordinated a US type 1 diabetes COVIDâ€19 registry. Fortyâ€six diabetes centers submitted pediatric cases for patients with laboratory confirmed COVIDâ€19. Associations between clinical factors and hospitalization were tested with Fisher's Exact Test. Logistic regression was used to calculate odds ratios for hospitali
Document: BACKGROUND: Diabetes is a risk factor for poor COVIDâ€19 outcomes, but pediatric patients with type 1 diabetes are poorly represented in current studies. METHODS: T1D Exchange coordinated a US type 1 diabetes COVIDâ€19 registry. Fortyâ€six diabetes centers submitted pediatric cases for patients with laboratory confirmed COVIDâ€19. Associations between clinical factors and hospitalization were tested with Fisher's Exact Test. Logistic regression was used to calculate odds ratios for hospitalization. RESULTS: Data from 266 patients with previously established type 1 diabetes aged <19 years with COVIDâ€19 were reported. Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) was the most common adverse outcome (n = 44, 72% of hospitalized patients). There were four hospitalizations for severe hypoglycemia, three hospitalizations requiring respiratory support (one of whom was intubated and mechanically ventilated), one case of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children, and 10 patients who were hospitalized for reasons unrelated to COVIDâ€19 or diabetes. Hospitalized patients (n = 61) were more likely than nonhospitalized patients (n = 205) to have minority race/ethnicity (67% vs 39%, P < 0.001), public insurance (64% vs 41%, P < 0.001), higher A1c (11% [97 mmol/mol] vs 8.2% [66 mmol/mol], P < 0.001), and lower insulin pump and lower continuous glucose monitoring use (26% vs 54%, P < 0.001; 39% vs 75%, P < 0.001). Age and gender were not associated with risk of hospitalization. Higher A1c was significantly associated with hospitalization, with an odds ratio of 1.56 (1.34â€1.84) after adjusting for age, gender, insurance, and race/ethnicity. CONCLUSIONS: Higher A1c remained the only predictor for hospitalization with COVIDâ€19. Diabetic ketoacidosis is the primary concern among this group.
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