Back to Search Start Over

Biomarkers Predictive for In-Hospital Mortality in Patients with Diabetes Mellitus and Prediabetes Hospitalized for COVID-19 in Austria: An Analysis of COVID-19 in Diabetes Registry

Authors :
Faisal, Aziz
Hannah, Stöcher
Alexander, Bräuer
Christian, Ciardi
Martin, Clodi
Peter, Fasching
Mario, Karolyi
Alexandra, Kautzky-Willer
Carmen, Klammer
Oliver, Malle
Felix, Aberer
Erich, Pawelka
Slobodan, Peric
Claudia, Ress
Caren, Sourij
Lars, Stechemesser
Harald, Stingl
Thomas, Stulnig
Norbert, Tripolt
Michael, Wagner
Peter, Wolf
Andreas, Zitterl
Othmar, Moser
Christian, Schelkshorn
Susanne, Kaser
Harald, Sourij
For The Covid-In Diabetes In Austria
Source :
Viruses; Volume 14; Issue 6; Pages: 1285
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: This study assessed the predictive performance of inflammatory, hepatic, coagulation, and cardiac biomarkers in patients with prediabetes and diabetes mellitus hospitalized for COVID-19 in Austria. Methods: This was an analysis of a multicenter cohort study of 747 patients with diabetes mellitus or prediabetes hospitalized for COVID-19 in 11 hospitals in Austria. The primary outcome of this study was in-hospital mortality. The predictor variables included demographic characteristics, clinical parameters, comorbidities, use of medication, disease severity, and laboratory measurements of biomarkers. The association between biomarkers and in-hospital mortality was assessed using simple and multiple logistic regression analyses. The predictive performance of biomarkers was assessed using discrimination and calibration. Results: In our analysis, 70.8% had type 2 diabetes mellitus, 5.8% had type 1 diabetes mellitus, 14.9% had prediabetes, and 8.6% had other types of diabetes mellitus. The mean age was 70.3 ± 13.3 years, and 69.3% of patients were men. A total of 19.0% of patients died in the hospital. In multiple logistic regression analysis, LDH, CRP, IL-6, PCT, AST-ALT ratio, NT-proBNP, and Troponin T were significantly associated with in-hospital mortality. The discrimination of NT-proBNP was 74%, and that of Troponin T was 81%. The calibration of NT-proBNP was adequate (p = 0.302), while it was inadequate for Troponin T (p = 0.010). Conclusion: Troponin T showed excellent predictive performance, while NT-proBNP showed good predictive performance for assessing in-hospital mortality in patients with diabetes mellitus hospitalized with COVID-19. Therefore, these cardiac biomarkers may be used for prognostication of COVID-19 patients.

Details

ISSN :
19994915
Volume :
14
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Viruses
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c33516b6d3d6a0d99cc7f1e744370c27