Stefan 2020 Nat Rev Endocrinol
Stefan N, Birkenfeld AL, Schulze MB, Ludwig DS (2020) Obesity and impaired metabolic health in patients with COVID-19. Nat Rev Endocrinol 2020:1β2 [published online ahead of print, 2020 Apr 23]. |
Β» PMID: 32327737 Open Access]
Stefan N, Birkenfeld AL, Schulze MB, Ludwig DS (2020) Nat Rev Endocrinol
Abstract: Preliminary data suggest that people with obesity are at increased risk of severe COVID-19. However, as data on metabolic parameters (such as BMI and levels of glucose and insulin) in patients with COVID-19 are scarce, increased reporting is needed to improve our understanding of COVID-19 and the care of affected patients.
β’ Bioblast editor: Gnaiger E
Selected quotes
- A descriptive study of a small sample of 24 (63 % were men) critically ill patients diagnosed with COVID-19 in the Seattle region was among the first to report BMI data (3 patients with a BMI in the normal category, 7 with overweight, 13 with obesity and 1 with missing data). Although the numbers are too small for meaningful statistical analyses, 85 % of the patients with obesity required mechanical ventilation and 62 % of the
patients with obesity died. These proportions are greater than those in the patients without obesity, in which 64 % required mechanical ventilation and 36 % died 4.
- Among 4,103 patients with COVID-19 at an academic health system in New York City, BMI >40 kg/m2 was the second strongest independent predictor of hospitalization, after old age 7.
Labels: MiParea: Patients
Pathology: Cardiovascular, Diabetes, Infectious, Obesity
Organism: Human
Preparation: Intact organism
Comorbidity, BMI, mitObesity2020, Virus