Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

COVID-19 can trigger onset of diabetes, team finds.

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JASON GALE

When Ziyad Al-Aly’s research team told him how often diabetes appeared to strike covid-19 survivors, he thought the data must be wrong, so he asked his five colleagues to crunch the numbers again.

Weeks later, they returned the same findings after sifting through millions of patient records. By then, AlAly had also gone digging into the scientific literature and was starting to come to terms with an alarming reality: Covid-19 isn’t just deadlier for people with diabetes, it’s also triggering the metabolic disease in many who didn’t previously have it.

“It took a while to convince me,” said Al-Aly, who directs the clinical epidemiolo­gy center at the Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System in Missouri. “It was hard to believe that covid could be doing this.”

Among covid-19’s many ripple effects, the worsening of the global diabetes burden could carry a heavy public-health toll. The underlying mechanisms stoking new-onset diabetes aren’t clear, though some doctors suspect the SARS-CoV-2 virus may damage the pancreas, the gland that makes insulin, which is needed to convert blood sugar into energy.

Sedentary lifestyles brought on by lockdowns could also be playing a role, as might late diagnoses after people avoided doctors’ offices during the pandemic. Even some children’s mild coronaviru­s cases can be followed by the swift onset of diabetes, scientists found.

Considered exclusivel­y a lung disease in the early days of the pandemic, covid-19 is increasing­ly recognized for its ability to ravage multiple organs and bodily systems, causing persistent and sometimes debilitati­ng symptoms in one in 10 sufferers months after their apparent recoveries.

Lingering metabolic complicati­ons, sometimes requiring high doses of insulin, suggest that a subset of survivors is developing diabetes — swelling the ranks of the more than 463 million people living with the chronic condition.

The disease, in which the body fails to produce enough or properly use insulin, cost an estimated $760 billion in the year before covid struck, driven by life-shortening complicati­ons spanning stroke and kidney failure to foot ulcers and blindness.

Al-Aly and colleagues were the first to measure the effect in the U.S. based on evidence from the national health-care databases of the Department of Veterans Affairs. They found that covid survivors were about 39% more likely to have new diabetes diagnoses in the six months after infection than were uninfected users of the VA health system.

The risk works out to about 6.5 additional diabetes cases for every 1,000 covid patients who don’t end up in the hospital. For those who do, the probabilit­y jumps to 37 per 1,000 — and it’s even higher for patients who required intensive care.

The numbers should be viewed in the context of covid’s sprawling reach, AlAly said. During the winter peak, more than 130,000 patients were hospitaliz­ed with the coronaviru­s in the U.S. alone. Globally, the virus is reported to have infected more than 153 million people, including more than 20 million in India, the country with the most people living with diabetes after China.

Al-Aly’s data was published last month in “Nature,” three weeks after a study of almost 50,000 hospitaliz­ed covid patients in England found that they were 50% more likely to have diabetes some 20 weeks after discharge than matched controls.

“We have a risk of seeing a clash of two pandemics,” said Francesco Rubino, chairman of metabolic and bariatric surgery at King’s College London, who set up a global registry of covid-related diabetes cases with Paul Zimmet, a professor of diabetes at Melbourne’s Monash University.

HUNT FOR EXPLANATIO­NS

Researcher­s have hypothesiz­ed pathways in which covid might increase the likelihood of a diabetes diagnosis, including the possibilit­y that the pancreas’s insulin-excreting beta cells are destroyed either by the virus or by the body’s response to the infection.

Other explanatio­ns may include an acute stress response to the infection, the use of steroid treatments that help survival but increase blood sugar, or just the unmasking of diabetes cases that had previously escaped diagnoses, said John Nicholls, a clinical professor of pathology at the University of Hong Kong.

Almost 500 doctors from around the world have agreed to share data via Rubino’s diabetes registry. They will upload patients’ known risk factors, lab results, clinical features, treatment and disease course informatio­n that will help identify the most prevalent form of the disease, possible causes and likely prognoses.

So far, close to 350 cases have been documented through the registry, and descriptiv­e anecdotes are flowing in almost every day through emails from concerned patients and parents.

“People write to us and say, ‘ My son just got diagnosed with diabetes. He’s an 8-year-old. He just got covid last month or two months ago. Could it be related?’” Rubino said.

The question of whether the virus is capable of inducing diabetes is controvers­ial. Surveillan­ce for diabetes from population-based data may be a clearer way to gauge the pandemic’s impact, said Jonathan Shaw, deputy director of the Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute in Melbourne, Australia.

Rubino aims to publish initial findings from the diabetes registry data midyear, and offers a word of early caution: There’s enough evidence of covid-19’s long-term consequenc­es that it should be avoided at any age.

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