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心血管代谢疾病与严重 COVID-19 之间的关联:一项全国范围内需要侵入性机械通气的患者的病例对照研究。

Association between cardiometabolic disease and severe COVID-19: a nationwide case-control study of patients requiring invasive mechanical ventilation.

机构信息

Department of Clinical Science and Education, Södersjukhuset, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden

Department of Cardiology, Södersjukhuset, Stockholm, Sweden.

出版信息

BMJ Open. 2021 Feb 17;11(2):e044486. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-044486.

Abstract

AIMS

The risks associated with diabetes, obesity and hypertension for severe COVID-19 may be confounded and differ by sociodemographic background. We assessed the risks associated with cardiometabolic factors for severe COVID-19 when accounting for socioeconomic factors and in subgroups by age, sex and region of birth.

METHODS AND RESULTS

In this nationwide case-control study, 1.086 patients admitted to intensive care with COVID-19 requiring mechanical ventilation (cases), and 10.860 population-based controls matched for age, sex and district of residency were included from mandatory national registries. ORs with 95% CIs for associations between severe COVID-19 and exposures with adjustment for confounders were estimated using logistic regression. The median age was 62 years (IQR 52-70), and 3003 (24.9%) were women. Type 2 diabetes (OR, 2.3 (95% CI 1.9 to 2.7)), hypertension (OR, 1.7 (95% CI 1.5 to 2.0)), obesity (OR, 3.1 (95% CI 2.4 to 4.0)) and chronic kidney disease (OR, 2.5 (95% CI 1.7 to 3.7)) were all associated with severe COVID-19. In the younger subgroup (below 57 years), ORs were significantly higher for all cardiometabolic risk factors. The risk associated with type 2 diabetes was higher in women (p=0.001) and in patients with a region of birth outside European Union(EU) (p=0.004).

CONCLUSION

Diabetes, obesity and hypertension were all independently associated with severe COVID-19 with stronger associations in the younger population. Type 2 diabetes implied a greater risk among women and in non-EU immigrants. These findings, originating from high-quality Swedish registries, may be important to direct preventive measures such as vaccination to susceptible patient groups.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER

Clinicaltrial.gov (NCT04426084).

摘要

目的

与糖尿病、肥胖和高血压相关的严重 COVID-19 风险可能存在混杂因素,并且因社会人口统计学背景而异。我们评估了在考虑社会经济因素以及按年龄、性别和出生地进行亚组分析时,与心血管代谢因素相关的严重 COVID-19 风险。

方法和结果

在这项全国范围内的病例对照研究中,从强制性国家登记处纳入了 1086 名因 COVID-19 需要机械通气而入住重症监护病房的患者(病例),以及 10860 名按年龄、性别和居住地区匹配的基于人群的对照者。使用逻辑回归估计了在调整混杂因素后,严重 COVID-19 与暴露之间的关联的优势比(OR)及其 95%置信区间(CI)。中位数年龄为 62 岁(IQR 52-70),3003 名(24.9%)为女性。2 型糖尿病(OR,2.3(95%CI 1.9 至 2.7))、高血压(OR,1.7(95%CI 1.5 至 2.0))、肥胖(OR,3.1(95%CI 2.4 至 4.0))和慢性肾病(OR,2.5(95%CI 1.7 至 3.7))均与严重 COVID-19 相关。在年龄较小的亚组(<57 岁)中,所有心血管代谢危险因素的 OR 均显著升高。女性(p=0.001)和出生地在欧盟(EU)以外的患者(p=0.004)的 2 型糖尿病风险更高。

结论

糖尿病、肥胖和高血压均与严重 COVID-19 独立相关,在年轻人群中相关性更强。2 型糖尿病在女性和非欧盟移民中风险更高。这些来自高质量瑞典登记处的数据,可能对指导疫苗等预防措施针对易感患者群体具有重要意义。

试验注册

Clinicaltrial.gov(NCT04426084)。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/52e2/7893210/c387dcb7f382/bmjopen-2020-044486f01.jpg

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