Study
links COVID-19 to rise in childhood type 1 diabetes
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[August 18, 2020]
By Kate Kelland
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 on Tuesday.
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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.
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Twenty-one of the children were tested for COVID-19 or had antibody tests to see
whether they had been exposed to the virus -- and five tested positive for novel
coronavirus infection.
Type 1 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.
"More research is needed to establish whether there is a definitive link, ...
but in the meantime we hope clinicians will be mindful of this," Logan said.
(Editing by Catherine Evans)
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