The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Obesity, chronic disease, age, and in-hospital mortality in patients with covid-19: analysis of ISARIC clinical characterisation protocol UK cohort

Obesity, chronic disease, age, and in-hospital mortality in patients with covid-19: analysis of ISARIC clinical characterisation protocol UK cohort
Obesity, chronic disease, age, and in-hospital mortality in patients with covid-19: analysis of ISARIC clinical characterisation protocol UK cohort
Background: although age, obesity and pre-existing chronic diseases are established risk factors for COVID-19 outcomes, their interactions have not been well researched.

Methods: we used data from the Clinical Characterisation Protocol UK (CCP-UK) for Severe Emerging Infection developed by the International Severe Acute Respiratory and emerging Infections Consortium (ISARIC). Patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19 from 6th February to 12th October 2020 were included where there was a coded outcome following hospital admission. Obesity was determined by an assessment from a clinician and chronic disease by medical records. Chronic diseases included: chronic cardiac disease, hypertension, chronic kidney disease, chronic pulmonary disease, diabetes and cancer. Mutually exclusive categories of obesity, with or without chronic disease, were created. Associations with in-hospital mortality were examined across sex and age categories.

Results: the analysis included 27,624 women with 6407 (23.2%) in-hospital deaths and 35,065 men with 10,001 (28.5%) in-hospital deaths. The prevalence of chronic disease in women and men was 66.3 and 68.5%, respectively, while that of obesity was 12.9 and 11.1%, respectively. Association of obesity and chronic disease status varied by age (p < 0.001). Under 50 years of age, obesity and chronic disease were associated with in-hospital mortality within 28 days of admission in a dose-response manner, such that patients with both obesity and chronic disease had the highest risk with a hazard ratio (HR) of in-hospital mortality of 2.99 (95% CI: 2.12, 4.21) in men and 2.16 (1.42, 3.26) in women compared to patients without obesity or chronic disease. Between the ages of 50–69 years, obesity and chronic disease remained associated with in-hospital COVID-19 mortality, but survival in those with obesity was similar to those with and without prevalent chronic disease. Beyond the age of 70 years in men and 80 years in women there was no meaningful difference between those with and without obesity and/or chronic disease.

Conclusion: obesity and chronic disease are important risk factors for in-hospital mortality in younger age groups, with the combination of chronic disease and obesity being particularly important in those under 50 years of age. These findings have implications for targeted public health interventions, vaccination strategies and in-hospital clinical decision making.
1471-2334
Yates, Thomas
dce0546a-5b14-41b5-b1a2-b78a9057389b
Zaccardi, Francesco
8d31a980-3db1-4477-9514-c18087cf886a
Islam, Nazrul
e5345196-7479-438f-b4f6-c372d2135586
Razieh, Cameron
1f2cef7c-20b4-4edc-9533-c34fed0bfc13
Gillies, Clare L.
fc26555a-79f4-4d0e-9a34-1dc4fbda4be9
Lawson, Claire A.
631da820-36df-4ffd-ab81-a76953a83eb2
Chudasama, Yogini
8026abd3-900a-4b96-8d5f-2ef59496929e
Rowlands, Alex
97bdaa98-c663-4c8e-a409-ec7d4e1f22dc
Davies, Melanie J.
f23a2532-1297-4ee3-93d1-8387ab98e151
Docherty, Annemarie B.
0b579461-1b7a-456a-aa13-09f229c7a9d8
Openshaw, Peter J. M.
4e1ec99b-8f41-4740-be78-a57b2361d483
Baillie, J. Kenneth
a08f7c7f-62a3-44ea-af0e-aa5f1ffde00c
Semple, Malcolm G.
15b207df-e044-4078-9b40-1af17b800ab1
Khunti, Kamlesh
3e64e5f4-0cc9-4524-aa98-3c74c25101c3
Yates, Thomas
dce0546a-5b14-41b5-b1a2-b78a9057389b
Zaccardi, Francesco
8d31a980-3db1-4477-9514-c18087cf886a
Islam, Nazrul
e5345196-7479-438f-b4f6-c372d2135586
Razieh, Cameron
1f2cef7c-20b4-4edc-9533-c34fed0bfc13
Gillies, Clare L.
fc26555a-79f4-4d0e-9a34-1dc4fbda4be9
Lawson, Claire A.
631da820-36df-4ffd-ab81-a76953a83eb2
Chudasama, Yogini
8026abd3-900a-4b96-8d5f-2ef59496929e
Rowlands, Alex
97bdaa98-c663-4c8e-a409-ec7d4e1f22dc
Davies, Melanie J.
f23a2532-1297-4ee3-93d1-8387ab98e151
Docherty, Annemarie B.
0b579461-1b7a-456a-aa13-09f229c7a9d8
Openshaw, Peter J. M.
4e1ec99b-8f41-4740-be78-a57b2361d483
Baillie, J. Kenneth
a08f7c7f-62a3-44ea-af0e-aa5f1ffde00c
Semple, Malcolm G.
15b207df-e044-4078-9b40-1af17b800ab1
Khunti, Kamlesh
3e64e5f4-0cc9-4524-aa98-3c74c25101c3

Yates, Thomas, Zaccardi, Francesco, Islam, Nazrul, Razieh, Cameron, Gillies, Clare L., Lawson, Claire A., Chudasama, Yogini, Rowlands, Alex, Davies, Melanie J., Docherty, Annemarie B., Openshaw, Peter J. M., Baillie, J. Kenneth, Semple, Malcolm G. and Khunti, Kamlesh (2021) Obesity, chronic disease, age, and in-hospital mortality in patients with covid-19: analysis of ISARIC clinical characterisation protocol UK cohort. BMC Infectious Diseases, 21 (1), [717]. (doi:10.1186/S12879-021-06466-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: although age, obesity and pre-existing chronic diseases are established risk factors for COVID-19 outcomes, their interactions have not been well researched.

Methods: we used data from the Clinical Characterisation Protocol UK (CCP-UK) for Severe Emerging Infection developed by the International Severe Acute Respiratory and emerging Infections Consortium (ISARIC). Patients admitted to hospital with COVID-19 from 6th February to 12th October 2020 were included where there was a coded outcome following hospital admission. Obesity was determined by an assessment from a clinician and chronic disease by medical records. Chronic diseases included: chronic cardiac disease, hypertension, chronic kidney disease, chronic pulmonary disease, diabetes and cancer. Mutually exclusive categories of obesity, with or without chronic disease, were created. Associations with in-hospital mortality were examined across sex and age categories.

Results: the analysis included 27,624 women with 6407 (23.2%) in-hospital deaths and 35,065 men with 10,001 (28.5%) in-hospital deaths. The prevalence of chronic disease in women and men was 66.3 and 68.5%, respectively, while that of obesity was 12.9 and 11.1%, respectively. Association of obesity and chronic disease status varied by age (p < 0.001). Under 50 years of age, obesity and chronic disease were associated with in-hospital mortality within 28 days of admission in a dose-response manner, such that patients with both obesity and chronic disease had the highest risk with a hazard ratio (HR) of in-hospital mortality of 2.99 (95% CI: 2.12, 4.21) in men and 2.16 (1.42, 3.26) in women compared to patients without obesity or chronic disease. Between the ages of 50–69 years, obesity and chronic disease remained associated with in-hospital COVID-19 mortality, but survival in those with obesity was similar to those with and without prevalent chronic disease. Beyond the age of 70 years in men and 80 years in women there was no meaningful difference between those with and without obesity and/or chronic disease.

Conclusion: obesity and chronic disease are important risk factors for in-hospital mortality in younger age groups, with the combination of chronic disease and obesity being particularly important in those under 50 years of age. These findings have implications for targeted public health interventions, vaccination strategies and in-hospital clinical decision making.

Text
s12879-021-06466-0 - Version of Record
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (1MB)

More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 31 July 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 470580
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470580
ISSN: 1471-2334
PURE UUID: b45f319f-5604-47cd-9247-e02f774cc409
ORCID for Nazrul Islam: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3982-4325

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 13 Oct 2022 16:41
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:15

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Thomas Yates
Author: Francesco Zaccardi
Author: Nazrul Islam ORCID iD
Author: Cameron Razieh
Author: Clare L. Gillies
Author: Claire A. Lawson
Author: Yogini Chudasama
Author: Alex Rowlands
Author: Melanie J. Davies
Author: Annemarie B. Docherty
Author: Peter J. M. Openshaw
Author: J. Kenneth Baillie
Author: Malcolm G. Semple
Author: Kamlesh Khunti

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×