Diabetes Care 30:2251-2257, 2007 DOI: 10.2337/dc06-2417 © 2007 by the American Diabetes Association
Type 2 Diabetes and Pneumonia OutcomesA population-based cohort study
1 Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Aarhus University Hospital, Aalborg, Denmark Address correspondence and reprint requests to Jette B. Kornum, Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Aarhus University Hospital, Sdr. Skovvej 15, DK-9100 Aalborg, Denmark. E-mail: j.kornum{at}rn.dk
OBJECTIVE—We sought to examine whether type 2 diabetes increases risk of death and complications following pneumonia and to assess the prognostic value of admission hyperglycemia. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—This was a population-based cohort study of adults with a first-time hospitalization for pneumonia between 1997 and 2004 (n = 29,900) in northern Denmark. Information on diabetes, comorbidity, laboratory findings, pulmonary complications, and bacteremia was obtained from medical databases. We used regression to compute adjusted relative risks of pulmonary complications, bacteremia, and mortality rate ratios (MRRs) within 90 days following hospitalization among patients with and without type 2 diabetes. The prognostic impact of admission hyperglycemia was studied in a subcohort (n = 13,574).
RESULTS— In total, 2,931 (9.8%) pneumonia patients had type 2 diabetes. Mortality among diabetic patients was greater than that among other patients: 19.9 vs. 15.1% after 30 days and 27.0 vs. 21.6% after 90 days, respectively, corresponding to adjusted 30- and 90-day MRRs of 1.16 (95% CI 1.07–1.27) and 1.10 (1.02–1.18). Presence of type 2 diabetes did not predict pulmonary complications or bacteremia. Adjustment for hyperglycemia attenuated the association between type 2 diabetes and mortality. High glucose level on admission was a predictor of death among patients with diabetes and more so among those without diagnosed diabetes: adjusted 30-day MRRs for glucose level CONCLUSIONS—Type 2 diabetes and admission hyperglycemia predict increased pneumonia-related mortality.
Abbreviations: ARDS, adult respiratory distress syndrome CAP, community-acquired pneumonia HAP, hospital-acquired pneumonia
Mortality among adults hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) ranges from 6 to 14% (1). Advanced age and comorbidity are associated with increased mortality in these patients (2–4). Given the hyperglycemia, decreased immunity, impaired lung function, and chronic complications, such as renal failure, heart disease, and pulmonary microangiopathy, associated with diabetes (5), it is plausible that diabetes may predict increased severity of pneumonia. However, results of recent observational studies and a meta-analysis of pneumonia-related mortality, based on pre-1996 research, were inconsistent (6–10). The discrepancies could stem from the use of clinic-based cohorts, confounding, or incomplete follow-up. Better diagnostic surveillance of diabetic patients may result in lower-than-expected mortality from pneumonia. Most studies lack data on pneumonia severity at hospitalization in diabetic versus nondiabetic patients (6,8–10), whereas claims that diabetic pneumonia patients have an increased risk of developing bacteremia (5,11) are questionable because data on availability of blood cultures are often absent. Evidence regarding pulmonary complications in diabetic patients with pneumonia is scant (5,7), as are data on the prognostic value of acute hyperglycemia for diabetic patients with pneumonia (10). As prevalences of diabetes (12) and pneumonia-related hospitalizations increase in the aging Western populations (4,13), accurate data are needed to understand the clinical course of and to potentially prevent pneumonia-related deaths. We examined the impact of type 2 diabetes on mortality, pulmonary complications, and bacteremia among patients hospitalized with pneumonia. We also assessed the prognostic value of acute hyperglycemia at admission.
Setting and study population We conducted this population-based cohort study in the Danish counties of North Jutland and Aarhus, with a mixed rural/urban population of 1.15 million. The cohort consisted of all adult patients with a first-time hospital discharge diagnosis of pneumonia recorded in population-based medical databases between 1 January 1997 and 31 December 2004. The Danish National Health Service provides universal tax-supported health care, including free access to primary and hospital care and reimbursement of most prescription medication costs (14). Since 1968, all Danish residents carry a unique civil registration number, encoding sex and birth date, which is used in all health databases and permits unambiguous record linkage among them.
Patients hospitalized with pneumonia We were able to assess pneumonia severity among the North Jutland County patients (n = 13,574) through linkage with a laboratory database, which stores records on all specimens sent by hospitals and practitioners, including the exact time of blood sample collection. Laboratory data were unavailable for the Aarhus County subcohort. We obtained the first laboratory results available on the admission day or the following day.
Data on diabetes
Data on hyperglycemia at admission
Confounding factors
Pneumonia outcome In the North Jutland cohort, we identified all pneumonia patients with at least one blood culture and at least one episode of bacteremia occurring during the hospitalization for pneumonia or within 30 days following the admission date. This was done through linkage to the County Bacteremia Research Database (21), which stores prospectively collected data on all blood cultures, as well as bacteriological and clinical data on all bacteremia episodes from 1997 through 2003. We considered only the first episode of bacteremia during the hospitalization for pneumonia.
Statistical analysis
Type 2 diabetes, pulmonary complications, and bacteremia
Admission hyperglycemia and mortality We analyzed data with SAS software (version 9.1.3; SAS Institute, Cary, NC). The Danish Registry Board approved the study (record no. 2006-41-6226).
Descriptive data Of the 29,900 adult patients with pneumonia, 2,931 (9.8%) had type 2 diabetes. Only 92 (0.3%) patients had type 1 diabetes and were excluded. Table 1 provides descriptive data. The median age was 75 years among the diabetic patients and 73 years among the nondiabetic patients. As expected, patients with type 2 diabetes (hereafter referred to as diabetes) were more likely to have congestive heart failure, history of myocardial infarction, peripheral vascular disease, cerebrovascular disease, renal disease, and obesity (which was likely underreported).
The median duration of hospital stay was 7 days and did not differ by diabetes status. In the North Jutland subcohort, patients with diabetes had higher median levels of urea nitrogen, creatinine, and glucose but nearly the same levels of C-reactive protein, leukocyte counts, and PaO2 at admission, compared with the nondiabetic patients.
Type 2 diabetes and mortality
Patients with type 2 diabetes were slightly more likely than other pneumonia patients to have pneumonia listed as a nonprimary discharge diagnosis (40.5 vs. 35.8%). The adjusted 30-day MRR was 1.18 (95% CI 1.05–1.34) for diabetic patients with pneumonia listed as a secondary discharge diagnosis and 1.13 (1.00–1.27) for those with pneumonia listed as the primary discharge diagnosis. In the North Jutland cohort, the prognostic impact of type 2 diabetes was slightly lower than that in the overall cohort, and the association between diabetes and mortality vanished after adjustment for confounding (30-day MRR 0.98 [95% CI 0.86–1.11]); 90-day MRR 0.97 [0.87–1.09]). Among the subset of patients with bacteremic pneumonia, mortality from diabetes was slightly lower, with MRR 0.86 (95% CI 0.54–1.38) and 0.92 (0.62–1.36), respectively. After the categorical variable for the glucose level at admission was added to the regression model, the adjusted 30- and 90-day MRRs for patients with diabetes markedly decreased, respectively, from 0.98 and 0.97 to 0.82 (0.71–0.95) and 0.89 (0.79–1.00). Using glucose level as a continuous variable yielded similar estimates (data not shown).
Type 2 diabetes, pulmonary complications, and bacteremia
Hyperglycemia at admission and mortality
In this population-based cohort study, type 2 diabetes was a clear marker of increased mortality from pneumonia, although this was largely explained by differences in patient age and comorbidity. The relative mortality increase conferred by type 2 diabetes appeared to be the highest in the early phase of infection but persisted for at least 90 days. Type 2 diabetes did not predict pulmonary complications or bacteremia. Admission glucose levels of >11 mmol/l in type 2 diabetic patients and of >6 mmol/l in other patients predicted increased mortality. In a Canadian study of 2,471 patients with CAP, including 401 patients with diabetes, McAlister et al. (10) found that a diabetes history did not predict in-hospital mortality. They did find hyperglycemia on admission to be associated with a poor prognosis for both diabetic and nondiabetic patients with CAP, which corroborates our findings. Based on 623,718 U.S. patients aged >65 years and hospitalized for CAP, Kaplan et al. (9) reported no association between in-hospital mortality and diabetes: adjusted RR 0.96 (95% CI 0.93–0.99). The patients with diabetes were identified from hospital records, thus excluding diabetic patients who were never hospitalized. The 1996 meta-analysis of CAP prognosis by Fine et al. (8) put a relative mortality at 1.3 (1.1–1.5) for diabetic compared with nondiabetic patients. The results of this analysis, which did not adjust for confounding, are similar to those of the crude 30-day MRR in our study. A recent Spanish study of 660 patients with CAP found that diabetes was associated with markedly increased 30-day mortality (adjusted RR 2.14 [95% CI 1.09–4.19]) (7). However, this study relied on a selected cohort of diabetic patients hospitalized at a university hospital, who were likely to have greater disease severity compared with patients in our population-based cohort. Our study's strengths include its large size, population-based design, adjustment for important confounders, complete follow-up for mortality, and detailed information on blood chemistry and bacteremia in one of the study regions. Use of routinely recorded health care data, collected independently of the study hypothesis, reduced the risk of information bias. One of the most important limitations is the possibility of surveillance bias, as physicians could be more likely to hospitalize diabetic patients with infection. Such bias, inevitable in observational studies on this topic, would cause underestimation of the diabetes-related mortality. However, comparable preadmission use of antibiotics, similar levels of inflammatory parameters, and similar proportions of patients with at least one blood culture among diabetic and nondiabetic patients all speak against a severe bias. The validity of our estimates depends on the accuracy of pneumonia and diabetes records. Despite inevitable coding errors, the estimated predictive value of a discharge diagnosis of pneumonia in Denmark is 90% (4). Some type 2 diabetic patients could be missed if they had not been hospitalized or treated with antidiabetes drugs, causing mortality underestimation. However, if patients identified with type 2 diabetes had greater-than-average disease severity, mortality would be overestimated. Still, it has been shown that 89% of known diabetes patients in Denmark could be identified by combining discharge diagnoses records with prescription data (22). Because admission diagnoses were unavailable in our database, we could not discriminate between CAP and HAP. The crude mortality rates from HAP range from 30 to as high as 70% (23). A recent Danish study showed that only 13% of pneumonia episodes in the hospital discharge database from North Jutland County were hospital acquired (4). If patients with diabetes were relatively more susceptible to HAP due to more frequent hospitalizations, failure to discriminate between CAP and HAP could partly explain the greater diabetes-related mortality found in our study compared with that in the study by Kaplan et al. (9). However, similarly increased mortality associated with type 2 diabetes was observed regardless of pneumonia being listed as the primary discharge diagnosis. Lack of data precluded adjustment for pneumococcal and influenza vaccinations, which have been associated with reduced mortality among patients hospitalized with pneumonia (24,25). Even if patients with type 2 diabetes were vaccinated at higher rates than others, this would lead to underestimation of the relative mortality associated with diabetes and therefore would not alter our conclusions. Biological mechanisms underlying increased mortality among diabetic patients hospitalized for pneumonia may include decreased leukocyte function and harmful effects of hyperglycemia (5,10,26). In fact, after controlling for admission glucose level in the subset of patients with available glucose measurements, type 2 diabetes no longer predicted increased mortality following pneumonia and even tended to be associated with improved prognosis. However, the estimates from the regression model are difficult to interpret for several reasons. First, it is conceptually difficult to separate blood glucose levels from diabetes, since hyperglycemia is included in the definition of diabetes. Second, MRR estimates associated with diabetes were lower in the North Jutland subcohort than in the total cohort. This may be due to chance, increased surveillance of diabetic patients in this region, or demographic differences (e.g., pneumonia patients in this region were older and had more comorbidities and thus were more likely to die regardless of diabetes status). Still, our analysis suggests that much of the increased mortality associated with type 2 diabetes is mediated through the glucose level. The impact of hyperglycemia on mortality was lower among patients with type 2 diabetes than that among other patients. In nondiabetic patients, hyperglycemia could signal physiological stress and thus greater pneumonia severity (27). Furthermore, some nondiabetic patients with hyperglycemia could have been undiagnosed and therefore untreated diabetic patients (27), experiencing a poor outcome following pneumonia. By contrast, in diabetic patients, hyperglycemia could be due to poorly controlled diabetes, stress, or both, since we did not know their baseline concentration of glucose (28). In addition, patients with type 2 diabetes might be more likely to receive insulin for hyperglycemia (28) during pneumonia-related hospitalization, thus improving outcome among critically ill patients (29). Hyperglycemia can cause intracellular and extracellular dehydration, electrolyte abnormalities, and depressed immunity (27). Furthermore, impaired lung function and pulmonary microangiopathy have been observed among diabetic patients (5). The elevated mortality that we observed in diabetic patients did not appear to be mediated through more pulmonary complications. Rather, patients with diabetes had more underlying renal disease and considerably higher levels of urea nitrogen and creatinine at the time of admission. Urea nitrogen level on admission predicts CAP outcome and is included in prognosis prediction rules such as the Pneumonia Severity Index score (26). We did not observe an elevated risk of bacteremia in diabetic pneumonia patients. In the subgroup of bacteremic pneumonia patients, mortality ratio estimates for those with diabetes indicated protective effect, confirming previous findings for diabetic patients with pneumococcal bacteremia (30). It has been suggested that diabetic patients with sepsis may be protected from severe complications, such as ARDS, via a less active inflammatory cascade (30,31). However, we observed, though based on little data, that diabetic pneumonia patients were more likely to have a record of ARDS. In conclusion, patients with type 2 diabetes have an increased risk of death associated with pneumonia hospitalization. Risk of hyperglycemia at admission was increased among the diabetic patients, while high glucose levels were associated with increased mortality in all patients. Our results showed that glucose on admission is a very important clinical indicator among patients with pneumonia. Our results also suggest that current hospitalization routines and surveillance during and after pneumonia-related hospitalization of patients with type 2 diabetes could be improved.
This study received financial support from the Western Danish Research Forum for Health Sciences, from "Klinisk Epidemiologisk Forskningsfond," and from "Århus Universitetshospitals Forskningsinitiativ."
Published ahead of print at http://care.diabetesjournals.org on 26 June 2007. DOI: 10.2337/dc06-2417. A table elsewhere in this issue shows conventional and Système International (SI) units and conversion factors for many substances. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. Received for publication November 27, 2006. Accepted for publication June 19, 2007.
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