Impact of Metabolic Syndrome in the Clinical Outcome of Disease by SARS-COV-2.

Arch Med Res

Clínica de Atención Integral para pacientes con Diabetes y Obesidad, Hospital General de México, Dr. Eduardo Liceaga, Ciudad de México, México. Electronic address:

Published: October 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on how comorbidities linked to metabolic syndrome (such as hypertension, obesity, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes) impact the risk of death from COVID-19.
  • The research analyzed over 528,000 COVID-19 cases, finding that the risk of death increased with the number of metabolic syndrome components present, with diabetes and hypertension combining for the highest risk.
  • The conclusion indicates that having even one metabolic syndrome component doubles the risk of death from COVID-19, particularly emphasizing the dangerous combination of diabetes with hypertension, while obesity and cardiovascular disease showed no significant interaction.

Article Abstract

Background: It has been observed that subjects with comorbidities related to metabolic syndrome (MetS) as hypertension, obesity, cardiovascular disease (CVD), and diabetes mellitus (DM2) show severe cases and a higher mortality by COVID-19. To date, there is little information available on the impact of the interaction between these comorbidities in the risk of death by COVID-19.

Aim Of The Study: To evaluate the impact of the combinations of MetS components in overall survival (OS) and risk of death among COVID-19 patients.

Methods: Using public data of the Ministry of Health, suspected, and confirmed COVID-19 cases from February 25-June 6, 2020 was analyzed. Mortality odds ratio (OR) was calculated with a univariate analysis (95% CI) and attributable risk. Interactions between components and survival curves were analyzed and a multivariate logistics regression analysis was conducted.

Results: The analysis included 528,651 cases out of which 202,951 were confirmed for COVID-19. Probabilities of OS among confirmed patients were 0.93, 0.89, 0.87, 0.86, and 0.83 while the OR of multivariate analysis was 1.83 (1.77-1.89), 2.58 (2.48-2.69), 2.83 (2.66-3.01), and 3.36 (2.83-3.99) for zero, one, two, three, and four MetS components, respectively. The combination with the highest risk was DM2 + hypertension at 2.22 (2.15-2.28), and the attributable risk for any component was 9.35% (9.21-9.49). Only the combination obesity + CVD showed no significant interaction.

Conclusion: The presence of one MetS component doubles the risk of death by COVID-19, which was higher among patients with DM2 + hypertension. Only obesity and CVD do not interact significantly.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8041184PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.arcmed.2021.04.001DOI Listing

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