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Original Research

The Effects of Type 2 Diabetes and Postoperative Pneumonia on the Mortality in Inpatients with Surgery

, , , , , & ORCID Icon show all
Pages 2507-2513 | Published online: 29 Nov 2019
 

Abstract

Objective

The aim of the study was to explore the relationship between type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and postoperative pneumonia, and the effects of T2DM and postoperative pneumonia on the mortality in inpatients with surgery.

Methods

A retrospective study was conducted on 43,174 inpatients with surgery in The First Hospital of Qinhuangdao. These patients were divided into four groups according to T2DM and postoperative pneumonia, Group A subjects without T2DM and postoperative pneumonia, Group B subjects with T2DM only, Group C subjects with postoperative pneumonia only and Group D subjects with T2DM and postoperative pneumonia. In-hospital mortality was collected.

Results

The incidences of postoperative pneumonia were higher in patients with T2DM than patients without T2DM (T2DM 3.2% vs Non-diabetes 1.7%, χ 2=36.219, P<0.001). The mortalities were 0.3% in Group A, 0.3% in Group B, 4.6% in Group C and 8.6% in Group D. In multiple logistic regression analysis, adjusted for sex, age, emergency admissions, coronary heart disease, heart failure, chronic kidney disease, hypoproteinemia, stroke and transient ischemic attack, the mortalities of Group C and Group D were 4.515 (95% CI: 2.779~7.336, P<0.001) times and 8.468 (95% CI: 3.567~20.099, P<0.001) times than the mortality of Group A.

Conclusion

T2DM is susceptible to postoperative pneumonia. The mortality increased in patients with postoperative pneumonia. When patients with T2DM and postoperative pneumonia at the same time, the mortality increased further. In T2DM patients with postoperative pneumonia, perioperative management should be improved for patient safety.

Acknowledgment

Chun-ming Ma and Qin Liu are joint first authors.

Statement

The experiment was approved by the ethics committee of the First Hospital of Qinhuangdao (Protocol number: 2019D006). The study is a retrospective study. Data were extracted from the Hospital Information System. Personal information of patients, such as name, telephone number, address, was not extracted. Informed consent was waived by the ethics committee of the First Hospital of Qinhuangdao and compliance with the Declaration of Helsinki.

Disclosure

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.