University of Cape Town: Being male and obese are not linked with ICU mortality in COVID-19 patients
A new international study has shown that contrary to some previous research, being male and increasing body mass index (BMI) are not associated with increased mortality in COVID-19 in patients admitted into an intensive care unit (ICU).
The study, led by Professor Bruce M Biccard, professor and second chair in the Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine at the University of Cape Town (UCT), was published in the journal Anaesthesia and provided an analysis of 58 studies and 44 305 patients.
Patients with COVID-19 in ICU were 40% more likely to die with a history of smoking, 54% more likely with high blood pressure, 41% more likely with diabetes, 75% more likely with respiratory disease, around twice as likely with cardiovascular disease or cancer, and 2.4 times more likely to die with kidney disease, than patients without these risk factors.
“The findings confirm the association between diabetes, cardiovascular and respiratory comorbidities with mortality in COVID-19 patients. However, the reported associations between male sex and increasing BMI worsening outcomes are not supported by this meta-analysis of patients admitted to ICU,” said Professor Biccard.
“This meta-analysis provides a large sample size with respect to these risk factors and is a robust estimate of risk associated with male sex and BMI in critically ill COVID-19 patients.”
“The risk factors of hypertension, smoking and respiratory disease may be linked by their association with angiotensin-converting enzyme … receptors in the body.”
Other factors associated with an increased risk of death were the severity of organ failure, needing mechanical ventilation (by 2.5 times compared with non-ventilated ICU patients), and elevated white blood cell counts and other markers of inflammation.
Analysing the reasons for the associations, the study found age may effectively represent frailty in COVID-19 patients which impacts on a person’s physiological reserve to overcome a critical illness.
The risk factors of hypertension, smoking and respiratory disease may be linked by their association with angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) receptors in the body, as seen by the increased expression of ACE-2 receptors among smokers and patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
“The association between hypertension and cardiovascular disease and increased mortality may be linked to the risk of cardiac injury associated with the systemic inflammatory response to COVID-19 infection,” added Biccard.