种族/民族对因COVID-19入院的2型糖尿病患者临床结局的影响:一项多国观察性分析

IF 0.4 Q4 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM British Journal of Diabetes Pub Date : 2023-06-28 DOI:10.15277/bjd.2023.411
E. Wilmot, S. Wild, Y. Ruan, S. Hadjadj, M. Wargny, Myia S. Williams, P. Saulnier, Xu Zhu, R. Ryder, R. Pekmezaris, M. Marre, Ben Field, P. Narendran, Sophie Harris, J. Gautier, D. Patel, K. Várnai, J. Davies, R. Roussel, R. Rea, P. Gourdy, B. Cariou, Alyson K. Myers, K. Khunti
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:描述英国、法国和美国住院的成年T2DM患者的种族/民族与冠状病毒病2019 (COVID-19)相关不良结局之间的关系。方法:分析来自英国ABCD全国COVID-19审计、法国CORONADO全国倡议和美国AMERICADO多中心研究的研究数据,以评估种族/民族与严重COVID-19之间的关系。严重COVID-19被定义为住院死亡和/或入住重症监护病房(ICU)。Logistic回归模型用于生成年龄调整后的优势比。结果:分析了3471例ABCD审计患者、2451例CORONADO患者和9321例入院的COVID-19合并T2DM的AMERICADO患者的数据。种族/族裔数据分别为3410例(98%)、2173例(89%)和8893例(95%)患者。在英国ABCD审计队列中,在调整年龄和性别后,与白人相比,亚洲和黑人种族/民族与死亡/ICU入院风险增加相关(OR 2.14;1.38-3.29和OR 2.09;分别为1.17 - -3.74)。当对其他混杂因素进行校正时,相关性更强(亚洲OR 2.88;1.72-4.82和Black OR 2.20;1.12 - -4.30)。在CORONADO队列中,中东/北非种族/民族对死亡/ICU入院有保护作用(OR 0.57;0.36 - -0.91)。在AMERICADO数据集中,种族和死亡之间没有单独的关联。结论:在因COVID-19入院的T2DM患者中,在英国ABCD数据中,非白人种族/民族与死亡/ICU入院风险较高相关,但在法国CORONADO或美国AMERICADO数据集中没有相关。需要进一步的研究来提高我们对观察到的结果差异的理解。
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The impact of race/ethnicity on the clinical outcomes of people with type 2 diabetes admitted to hospital with COVID-19: an observational multi-national analysis
Aims: To describe the relationship between race/ethnicity and adverse outcomes related to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in adults with T2DM admitted to hospital in the UK, France and USA. Methods: Study data from the UK ABCD nationwide COVID- 19 audit, the French CORONADO nationwide initiative and the USA AMERICADO multi-centre study were analysed to assess the association between race/ethnicity and severe COVID-19. Severe COVID-19 was defined as death in hospital and/or admission to the intensive care unit (ICU). Logistic regression models were used to generate age-adjusted odds ratios. Results: Data from 3,471 patients in the ABCD audit, from 2,451 CORONADO patients and from 9,321 AMERICADO patients admitted with COVID-19 and T2DM were analysed. Race/ethnicity data were available for 3,410 (98%), 2,173 (89%) and 8,893 (95%) patients, respectively. In the UK ABCD audit cohort, Asian and Black race/ethnicity were associated with an increased risk of death/ICU admission compared to White when adjusted for age and sex (OR 2.14; 1.38-3.29 and OR 2.09; 1.17-3.74, respectively). When adjusted for additional confounders the association was stronger (Asian OR 2.88; 1.72-4.82 and Black OR 2.20; 1.12-4.30). In the CORONADO cohort Middle Eastern/North African race/ethnicity was protective against death/ICU admission (OR 0.57; 0.36-0.91). There was no association between ethnicity and death alone in the AMERICADO dataset. Conclusion: In those with T2DM admitted to hospital with COVID-19, a non-White race/ethnicity was associated with higher risk of death/ICU admission in the UK ABCD data but not in French CORONADO or USA AMERICADO datasets. Further research is required to improve our understanding of the observed discrepancies in outcomes.
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来源期刊
British Journal of Diabetes
British Journal of Diabetes ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM-
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16.70%
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