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Get Free AccessHepatitis B virus (HBV) infection and type-2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) affect millions of individuals worldwide, whereas their interplay remains largely unclear. Here, we analyzed a large cohort of 330 HBV-infected inpatients with T2DM (so-called HBV + T2DM patients) and 330 T2DM inpatients without HBV infection (T2DM patients). Poor glycemic control was defined by glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) ≥ 7%. Among 330 HBV + T2DM patients, 252 (76%) aged ≥ 50 years, 223 (68%) were males, 205 (62%) experienced poor glycemic control. The propensity-score matching approach was applied to match patient age, gender, comorbidities, and antidiabetic treatment between T2DM + HBV and T2DM patients. Compared with T2DM patients, HBV + T2DM patients had poorer glycemic control, longer hospitalization length, and higher alanine aminotransferase (p < 0.05). HBV + T2DM patients with HBV DNA ≥ 100 IU/mL or HBsAg ≥ 0.05 IU/mL had worse HbA1c control than T2DM patients without HBV infection (p < 0.05). HBV + T2DM patients who received no anti-HBV therapy had worse HbA1c control than HBV + T2DM patients receiving anti-HBV therapy (p < 0.05). Both insulin and anti-HBV therapy were significant factors associated with glycemic control in HBV + T2DM patients. Overall, HBV + T2DM patients exhibited poorer glycemic control than T2DM patients, but their clinical outcomes were likely improved by insulin plus anti-HBV treatment. Early management of HBV infection likely contributes to better clinical outcomes in HBV-infected patients with T2DM.
Ting Cai, Tingting Yue, Ming Xu, Pan Zhang, Yue Wang, Qi Liu, Jie Huang, Ting Shen, Qiang Yin, Zhifeng Sheng, Yang Xiao, Tuo Deng, Min Zhang, De Clercq Erik, Chi Zhang, Guangdi Li (2023). Poor glycemic control in type‐2 diabetic patients infected with hepatitis B: A retrospective propensity‐matched study. , 95(3), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/jmv.28635.
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Type
Article
Year
2023
Authors
16
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jmv.28635
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