Man T, Seicean R, Lucaciu L, Istrate A, Seicean A
Department of Gastroenterology, Regional Institute of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 'Iuliu Hatieganu' University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Cluj-Napoca, Romania.
Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci. 2022 Aug;26(16):5745-5754. doi: 10.26355/eurrev_202208_29511.
Acute pancreatitis (AP) is increasingly recognized as a major cause of diabetes, however, the frequency and risk factors associated with new-onset diabetes are not well established. We aimed to assess the frequency and risk factors associated with new-onset diabetes, the time of diabetes occurrence, and the difference between early and late-onset diabetes following an AP episode.
This prospective study included adult patients with AP admitted to a tertiary referral center, followed-up for one year to assess the occurrence of postpancreatitis diabetes. Diabetes was defined in accordance with World Health Organization criteria and the severity of AP was assessed based on the 2012 revised Atlanta classification.
Of 329 patients with AP, 29 (8.8%) were diagnosed with diabetes secondary to AP. Of these, 21 (6.37%) had early-onset diabetes (within one month after the acute episode) whereas 8 (2.42%) had late-onset diabetes (more than one month after the AP episode). Obesity and acute necrosis were more frequent in patients with new-onset diabetes compared to those without (55.2% vs. 33.4%, p=0.040 and 31% vs. 7.7%, p<0.01), and remained statistically significant in multivariate analysis. No statistically significant differences were found between these groups regarding sex, age, etiology and severity of AP. The patients with early-onset diabetes were older than those with late-onset (61 vs. 45 years old), in univariate and multivariate analysis (p=0.018 and p=0.038, OR=0.87).
Less than 10% of patients with AP developed diabetes within 1 year, particularly obese patients and those with acute pancreatic necrosis of more than 50%. Patients aged over 61 years old developed diabetes in the first month after the acute episode of AP.
急性胰腺炎(AP)日益被认为是糖尿病的主要病因,然而,新发糖尿病的发生率及相关危险因素尚未完全明确。我们旨在评估新发糖尿病的发生率及危险因素、糖尿病发生时间,以及AP发作后早发性和迟发性糖尿病之间的差异。
这项前瞻性研究纳入了入住三级转诊中心的成年AP患者,随访一年以评估胰腺炎后糖尿病的发生情况。糖尿病根据世界卫生组织标准进行定义,AP的严重程度根据2012年修订的亚特兰大分类进行评估。
329例AP患者中,29例(8.8%)被诊断为AP继发糖尿病。其中,21例(6.37%)为早发性糖尿病(急性发作后1个月内),而8例(2.42%)为迟发性糖尿病(AP发作1个月后)。与未患糖尿病的患者相比,新发糖尿病患者肥胖和急性坏死更为常见(55.2%对33.4%,p=0.040;31%对7.7%,p<0.01),在多变量分析中仍具有统计学意义。这些组在性别、年龄、AP病因和严重程度方面未发现统计学显著差异。在单变量和多变量分析中,早发性糖尿病患者比迟发性糖尿病患者年龄更大(61岁对45岁)(p=0.018和p=0.038,OR=0.87)。
不到10%的AP患者在1年内发生糖尿病,尤其是肥胖患者和急性胰腺坏死超过50%的患者。61岁以上的患者在AP急性发作后的第一个月发生糖尿病。