American Indians/Alaska Natives (AIAN) bear the greatest burden of diabetes and are overrepresented in the dialysis population. They were also hardest hit by COVID-19, w/higher mortality rates than any U.S. racial/ethnic group. Early in the pandemic, hyperferritinemia was prognostic of poor COVID-19 outcomes, including death. We determined the association of ferritin w/ COVID-19 infection, hospitalization, and mortality in AIAN dialysis patients w/ diabetes. We followed 1,065 AIAN in-center hemodialysis patients w/ diabetes from January 2020 to March 2022. For incident COVID infection, baseline ferritin was defined as the average from one year prior to two weeks prior to RT-PCR confirmed COVID-infection (days-365,-14). Change in ferritin was defined as the difference between the baseline average and two week prior average (-14,0) to the PCR positive test date. For non-infected patients, a randomly selected date following the distribution of PCR positive dates of COVID patients was chosen as the test date. Logistic regression assessed the association of ferritin and its change w/ COVID-19 infection, hospitalization and mortality, adjusting for age, sex, race, vaccination status, vintage, and lab values. During follow-up, the cumulative incidence of infection was 35.7%; in the infected, 26.7% were hospitalized and 12.6% died. While baseline ferritin was not linked to infection risk (p=0.42), TSAT (p=0.02) and ferritin change (p=0.09) were marginally. In the infected, ferritin two weeks prior to RT-PCR confirmed diagnosis were linked to hospitalization (p=0.02), while ferritin change was not (p=0.59). Neither baseline nor ferritin change was linked w/ mortality; but lower baseline hgb (p=0.09), higher neutrophils (p=0.09) and neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (p=0.06) showed weak relationships w/ mortality. Ferritin was associated w/ future risk of COVID-19 infection and hospitalization but not mortality in AIAN dialysis patients w/ diabetes.

Disclosure

M. Hu: None. T. Quandelacy: None. Y. Wang: None. P. Kotanko: Other Relationship; Fresenius Medical Care. R.B. Conway: None.

Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. More information is available at http://www.diabetesjournals.org/content/license.