The Pak Banker

Study links COVID-19 to rise in childhood type 1 diabetes

- LONDON -REUTERS

Cases of type 1 diabetes among children in a small UK study almost doubled during the peak of Britain's COVID-19 epidemic, suggesting a possible link between the two diseases that needs more investigat­ion, scientists said.

While the study is based on only a handful of cases, it is the first to link COVID-19 and new-onset type 1 diabetes in children, and doctors should be on the look-out, the Imperial College London researcher­s said. "Our analysis shows that during the peak of the pandemic the number of new cases of type 1 diabetes in children was unusually high in two of the hospitals (we studied) compared to previous years," said Karen Logan, who co-led the study.

"When we investigat­ed further, some of these children had active coronaviru­s or had previously been exposed to the virus."

Logan said previous reports from China and Italy had noted that children were being diagnosed in hospitals with new-onset type 1 diabetes during the pandemic. This study, published in the Diabetes Care journal, analysed data from 30 children in London hospitals diagnosed with new-onset type 1 diabetes during the first peak of the pandemic - around double the cases seen in this period in previous years.

Twenty-one of the children were tested for COVID19 or had antibody tests to see whether they had been exposed to the virus - and five tested positive for novel coronaviru­s infection. z1 diabetes causes insulin-producing cells in the pancreas to be destroyed, preventing the body from producing enough insulin to regulate blood sugar levels. The Imperial team said one possible explanatio­n might be that the novel coronaviru­s' spike protein might attack insulin-making cells in the pancreas.

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