Children's Hospital of Illinois, OSF Saint Francis Medical Center, Peoria, Illinois
University of Illinois College of Medicine, Peoria, Illinois.
Hosp Pediatr. 2021 Nov;11(11):e297-e316. doi: 10.1542/hpeds.2021-006087. Epub 2021 Jun 24.
To describe the impact of obesity on disease severity and outcomes of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) among hospitalized children.
This retrospective cohort study from the Society of Critical Care Medicine Viral Respiratory Illness Universal Study registry included all children hospitalized with COVID-19 from March 2020 to January 2021. Obesity was defined by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention BMI or World Health Organization weight for length criteria. Critical illness definition was adapted from National Institutes of Health criteria of critical COVID. Multivariate mixed logistic and linear regression was performed to calculate the adjusted odds ratio of critical illness and the adjusted impact of obesity on hospital length of stay.
Data from 795 patients (96.4% United States) from 45 sites were analyzed, including 251 (31.5%) with obesity and 544 (68.5%) without. A higher proportion of patients with obesity were adolescents, of Hispanic ethnicity, and had other comorbidities. Those with obesity were also more likely to be diagnosed with multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (35.7% vs 28.1%, = .04) and had higher ICU admission rates (57% vs 44%, < .01) with more critical illness (30.3% vs 18.3%, < .01). Obesity had more impact on acute COVID-19 severity than on multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children presentation. The adjusted odds ratio for critical illness with obesity was 3.11 (95% confidence interval: 1.8-5.3). Patients with obesity had longer adjusted length of stay (exponentiated parameter estimate 1.3; 95% confidence interval: 1.1-1.5) compared with patients without obesity but did not have increased mortality risk due to COVID-19 (2.4% vs 1.5%, = .38).
In a large, multicenter cohort, a high proportion of hospitalized children from COVID-19 had obesity as comorbidity. Furthermore, obesity had a significant independent association with critical illness.
描述肥胖症对住院儿童 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)疾病严重程度和结局的影响。
本研究为来自危重病医学会病毒呼吸道疾病通用研究登记处的回顾性队列研究,纳入了 2020 年 3 月至 2021 年 1 月期间因 COVID-19 住院的所有儿童。肥胖症的定义依据是疾病控制与预防中心的 BMI 或世界卫生组织的体重与身高标准。危重症的定义改编自美国国立卫生研究院对 COVID-19 的危重症标准。采用多变量混合逻辑回归和线性回归计算危重症的调整比值比和肥胖对住院时间的调整影响。
对来自 45 个地点的 795 名患者(96.4%来自美国)的数据进行了分析,其中 251 名(31.5%)患者肥胖,544 名(68.5%)患者不肥胖。肥胖患者中青少年、西班牙裔和合并其他疾病的比例更高。肥胖患者也更可能被诊断为儿童多系统炎症综合征(35.7%比 28.1%, =.04),且 ICU 入院率更高(57%比 44%, <.01),更易发生危重症(30.3%比 18.3%, <.01)。肥胖对急性 COVID-19 严重程度的影响大于对儿童多系统炎症综合征的影响。肥胖患者发生危重症的调整比值比为 3.11(95%置信区间:1.8-5.3)。与无肥胖症的患者相比,肥胖症患者的调整住院时间更长(指数参数估计值为 1.3;95%置信区间:1.1-1.5),但 COVID-19 死亡率并未增加(2.4%比 1.5%, =.38)。
在一项大型多中心队列研究中,很大比例的 COVID-19 住院患儿存在肥胖合并症。此外,肥胖症与危重症有显著的独立关联。