Impact of Glycemic Control on Asthma Exacerbation, Asthma Control, and Lung Function in Diabetic Patients: A Systematic Review

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Muhammad Abas Khan
Ayesha Sharif
Muhammad Mamoon
Abdul Momin Muhammad Sabir
Sayyed Muhammad Taha Hussain
Rabia Mehsood
Muhammad Usman

Abstract

Background: Asthma and diabetes mellitus frequently coexist and may interact through metabolic and inflammatory pathways that influence exacerbation risk and pulmonary function. Glycemic dysregulation has been proposed as a contributor to poorer asthma outcomes, yet the clinical evidence has not been consistently synthesized across outcome domains. Objective: To systematically evaluate the impact of glycemic control on asthma exacerbations, asthma control, asthma-related healthcare utilization, and lung function in individuals with asthma and diabetes mellitus or glycemic dysfunction. Methods: A PRISMA-compliant systematic review was conducted using PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar to identify original observational and interventional studies published through March 2025. Eligible studies assessed glycemic status using HbA1c and/or blood glucose indices and reported asthma-related outcomes including exacerbations, emergency department visits, hospitalization, asthma control measures, and spirometric parameters (FEV₁, FVC, vital capacity). Methodological quality was assessed using the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale. Due to heterogeneity in exposure definitions, outcomes, and effect reporting, findings were synthesized narratively. Results: Five studies met inclusion criteria. Across studies, poorer glycemic control was generally associated with lower lung function and increased risk of asthma-related hospitalization. Higher HbA1c correlated inversely with spirometric indices, including FEV₁ and FVC. Population-based evidence indicated elevated HbA1c, including levels in prediabetes and diabetes ranges, was associated with higher odds of asthma-related hospitalization. Metformin exposure was associated with reduced hazards of asthma-related emergency department visits and hospitalization in a large retrospective cohort. Conclusion: Poor glycemic status is associated with increased asthma morbidity and reduced lung function. Optimizing glycemic control may be clinically relevant in integrated asthma–diabetes management, although higher-quality prospective studies and trials are needed to establish causality.

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Muhammad Abas Khan, Ayesha Sharif, Muhammad Mamoon, Abdul Momin Muhammad Sabir, Sayyed Muhammad Taha Hussain, Rabia Mehsood, et al. Impact of Glycemic Control on Asthma Exacerbation, Asthma Control, and Lung Function in Diabetic Patients: A Systematic Review. JHWCR [Internet]. 2025 Apr. 23 [cited 2026 Apr. 18];3(3):e1045. Available from: https://jhwcr.com/index.php/jhwcr/article/view/1045