COVID-related diabetes may be temporary; racial disparities widen with
Omicron infections
Send a link to a friend
[February 28, 2022]
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) - The following is a summary of
some recent studies on COVID-19. They include research that warrants
further study to corroborate the findings and that has yet to be
certified by peer review.
COVID-related diabetes may be temporary
Patients with severe COVID-19 who develop diabetes while hospitalized
may have only a temporary form of the disease and their blood sugar
levels may return to normal afterward, according to new findings.
Researchers studied 594 patients who showed signs of diabetes while
hospitalized for COVID-19, including 78 with no previous diagnosis of
diabetes. Compared to patients with pre-existing diabetes, many of the
newly diagnosed patients had less severe blood sugar issues but more
serious COVID-19. Roughly a year after leaving the hospital, 40% of the
newly diagnosed patients had gone back to blood sugar levels below the
cutoff for diabetes, researchers reported in the Journal of Diabetes and
Its Complications. "This suggests to us that newly diagnosed diabetes
may be a transitory condition related to the acute stress of COVID-19
infection," study coauthor Dr. Sara Cromer of the Massachusetts General
Hospital in Boston said in a statement.
"Our results suggest that ... insulin deficiency, if it occurs at all,
is generally not permanent," Cromer said. "These patients may only need
insulin or other medications for a short time, and it's therefore
critical that physicians closely follow them to see if and when their
conditions improve."
COVID-19 racial disparities widen with Omicron
New data illustrate the jumps in U.S. coronavirus infection rates caused
by the Omicron variant and the heavier toll it has taken on minorities
in the latest example of racial disparity in the pandemic.
[to top of second column]
|
An elderly man receives a dose of Sinovac Biotech's CoronaVac
COVID-19 vaccine, following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
outbreak, at a community vaccination centre, in Hong Kong, China,
February 25, 2022. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
Overall, for every 2,000 people in
the United States, roughly one per day caught a first-time infection
when the Delta variant was dominant, compared to about 8 to 10 per
day in January after Omicron took over, researchers found. Racial
disparities further widened with Omicron, the researchers reported
on Tuesday on medRxiv https:// ahead of peer review. During the
Delta period, the infection rate in Black patients was 1.3 to 1.4
times higher than for white patients. With Omicron, it jumped to 3
to 4 times higher. The Delta infection rate of 1.6 to 1.8 times
higher in Hispanics versus non-Hispanics grew to 3 times higher with
Omicron. Children were also hit hard by Omicron infections. The rate
in January was highest in children under age 5, at 22 a day per
2,000 in that age-group.
The findings were drawn from 733,509 Delta infections and 147,964
Omicron cases. Omicron was associated with significantly lower rates
of emergency department visits, hospitalizations, intensive care
unit admissions, and need for mechanical ventilation. However,
emergency department visits and need for intensive care was higher
among Blacks and Hispanics. The researchers noted that the study
subjects might not be representative of all U.S. patients.
Cancer treatments do not impair COVID-19 survival
Powerful cancer therapies do not increase the risk of death for
cancer patients with COVID-19, according to research based on data
from the UK Coronavirus Cancer Monitoring Project.
Researchers looked at 2,515 adults with COVID-19 who were receiving
- or had recently received - systemic cancer treatments such as
chemotherapy, immunotherapy, hormonal therapy, or certain targeted
drugs. Within a week after COVID-19 diagnosis, 38% of the patients
had died. Half the patients in the study were older than 72.
Overall, patients with lung cancer or blood cancers were at higher
risk for death. Chemotherapy, however, did not affect patients' risk
of death from the virus, and immunotherapy actually improved the
odds of survival, according to a report published on Monday in JAMA
Network Open.
Earlier studies of COVID-19 patients have found that those with
cancer have poorer outcomes, but that may be due to "age, sex,
comorbidities, and cancer subtype rather than anticancer
treatments," the research team concluded.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |