Metabolic Syndrome Triples COVID-19 Death Risk

Metabolic Syndrome Triples COVID-19 Death Risk
Staff are seen with a patient from Italy at the Corona Outpatient Clinic in the Dresden University Hospital in Dresden, Germany, on March 26, 2020. (Matthias Rietschel-Pool/Getty Images)
9/15/2020
Updated:
9/15/2020

Patients hospitalized with COVID-19 who had a combination of high blood pressure, obesity, and diabetes were more than three times more likely to die from the disease, according to a new study.

Metabolic syndrome is a cluster of at least three of five conditions—hypertension, high blood sugar, obesity, high triglycerides, and low HDL cholesterol—that increase the risk for cardiovascular disease.

The study in the journal Diabetes Care is the first to look at the impact of metabolic syndrome on outcomes for COVID-19 patients.

“Together, obesity, diabetes and pre-diabetes, high blood pressure, and abnormal cholesterol levels are all predictive of higher incidents of death in these patients. The more of these diagnoses that you have, the worse the outcomes,” said lead author Joshua Denson, assistant professor of medicine and pulmonary and critical care medicine physician at Tulane University School of Medicine.

“The underlying inflammation that is seen with metabolic syndrome may be the driver that is leading to these more severe cases.”

Researchers followed outcomes for 287 patients hospitalized for COVID-19 at Tulane Medical Center and University Medical Center New Orleans from March 30 to April 5, which was at the peak of the pandemic in New Orleans. More than 85 percent of patients in the study identified as non-Hispanic black. The mean age was 61 years old and almost 57 percent were women.

The most common conditions were hypertension (80 percent), obesity (65 percent), diabetes (54 percent), and low HDL (39 percent).

Researchers looked at two groups—those diagnosed with metabolic syndrome and those who weren’t. They tracked outcomes including if patients were admitted to an intensive care unit, placed on a ventilator, developed acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), or died from the disease.

Almost 66 percent of the patients in the study had metabolic syndrome. When these cases were compared with patients without the condition, 56 percent versus 24 percent required the ICU, 48 percent versus 18 percent required a ventilator, 37 percent versus 11 percent developed ARDS, and 26 percent versus 10 percent died.

Importantly, after accounting for age, sex, race, hospital location, and other conditions, the patients with metabolic syndrome were 3.4 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than those who didn’t have the condition.

These patients were also nearly five times more likely to be admitted to an ICU, need a ventilator, or develop ARDS.

The study didn’t find an increase in mortality for patients when only one of the conditions clustered with metabolic syndrome was examined alone. However, being obese or having diabetes was associated with increased odds of ICU admission and being put on a ventilator.

“Metabolic syndrome should be considered a composite predictor of COVID-19 lethal outcome, increasing the odds of mortality by the combined effects of its individual components,” Denson said.

He would advise anyone who meets the criteria for metabolic syndrome to be vigilant in taking measures to reduce risk or exposure to the coronavirus.

“It doesn’t matter if you’re young or old—we took that into account,” he said. “You really should be extra careful. I would say it should impact both preventing your exposures and, if you end up getting sick, you should probably see your doctor sooner.”

This article was originally published by Tulane University. Republished via Futurity.org under Creative Commons License 4.0.

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