Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) are at risk for a higher incidence and severity of COVID-19, as well as its adverse outcomes, including post-Covid syndrome.AIM: to assess the incidence of cardiorenal complications in patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes (T1DM/T2DM) who have had COVID-19, and to analyze the structure and severity of disorders according to examination data at the Diamobil mobile medical diagnostic and treatment center.MATERIALS AND METHODS: a cohort of T1DM and T2DM patients examined in Diamobil (n=318), with a confirmed anamnesis of COVID-19 (n=236). The time interval between COVID-19 and the visit to Diamobil was 8.7/8.2 months for T1DM/T2DM. The parameters of the last visit before COVID-19 recorded in the Federal Register of Diabetes (FRD) were used as initial data.RESULTS: Clinical characteristics of patients with T1DM/T2DM: age — 49.2/64.5 years, duration of DM — 22/11 years, proportion of women — 64/73%, respectively. After analysis the data from visits before and after COVID-19 there weren’t statistically significant differences in HbA1c levels for both types of DM (before 9.0/8.3%; after 8.4/8.2%, respectively), there was the intensification of glucose lowering therapy (the proportion of patients with T2DM on 2 and 3 component therapy increased by 4.3% and 1.6%, the proportion of patients on insulin therapy by 16%). After COVID-19, there was a statistically significant decrease in glomerular filtration rate (GFR) in T1DM from 88.1 to 62 ml/min/1.73 m2; with T2DM from 74.7 to 54.1 ml/min/1.73 m2. When assessing acute diabetic complications, there was an increase in the frequency of coma in T1DM by 1.5 times, severe hypoglycemia in T1DM by 3 times, and in T2DM by 1.7 times. Analysis of the frequency of cardiorenal complications before and after COVID-19 showed a total increase of 8.5% in T1DM, by 13.2% in T2DM, of which myocardial infarction, ischemic heart disease, and CHF increased in T1DM in the range from 1.5 to 5 times, with T2DM by 1.3 times, the frequency of CKD with T1DM by 1.5 times, with T2DM by 5.6 times.CONCLUSION: There was a decline of kidney filtration function (decrease in GFR) and an increase in the frequency of cardiovascular complications in both types of diabetes in post-Covid period while patients achieved a stable HbA1c levels by intensifying therapy during the COVID-19 infection. This fact reflects combined damage to the kidney and cardiovascular system as a part of the post-Covid syndrome and determines a key set of measures for the development of preventive strategies.

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