1. Prevalence and prognosis of fulminant type 1 diabetes mellitus in The Middle East: a comparative analysis in a 5-year nationwide cohort.
- Author
-
Ata, Fateen, Khan, Adeel Ahmad, Khamees, Ibrahim, AlKodmani, Sham, Al-Sadi, Anas, Yaseen, Khaled Bani, Muthanna, Bassam, Godwin, Angela, Beer, Stephen Frederick, and Bashir, Mohammed
- Subjects
- *
TYPE 1 diabetes , *LEUKOCYTE count , *MORTALITY , *RESEARCH funding , *DISEASE duration , *SEX distribution , *HOSPITAL care , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DIABETIC acidosis , *C-peptide , *SOUTH Asians , *AGE factors in disease , *ARABS , *INTENSIVE care units , *DATA analysis software , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LENGTH of stay in hospitals , *DISEASE progression , *MIDDLE Easterners , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Purpose: To analyze the prevalence and progression of fulminant type 1 diabetes (FT1D) in Qatar. Methods: This retrospective study analyzed consecutive index- diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) admissions (2015–2020) among patients with new-onset T1D (NT1D) in Qatar. Results: Of the 242 patients, 2.5% fulfilled the FT1D diagnostic criteria. FT1D patients were younger (median-age 4-years vs.15-years in classic-T1D). Gender distribution in FT1D was equal, whereas the classic-T1D group showed a female predominance at 57.6% (n = 136). FT1D patients had a mean C-peptide of 0.11 ± 0.09 ng/ml, compared to 0.53 ± 0.45 ng/ml in classic-T1D. FT1D patients had a median length of stay (LOS) of 1 day (1-2.2) and a DKA duration of 11.25 h (11–15). The median (length of stay) LOS and DKA duration in classic-T1D patients were 2.5 days (1-3.9) and 15.4 h (11–23), respectively. The FT1D subset primarily consisted of moderate (83.3%) and severe 916.7%) DKA, whereas classic T1D had 25.4% mild, 60.6% moderate, and 14% severe DKA cases. FT1D was associated with a higher median white cell count (22.3 × 103/uL) at admission compared to classic T1D (10.6 × 103/uL). ICU admission was needed for 66.6% of FT1D patients, compared to 38.1% of classic-T1D patients. None of the patients in the FT1D group had mortality, while two died in the classic-T1D group. Conclusion: This is the first study establishing the existence of FT1D in ME, which presented distinctively from classic-T1D, exhibiting earlier age onset and higher critical care requirements. However, the clinical outcomes in patients with FT1D seem similar to classic T1D. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF