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URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33855033/

⇱ Hepatic Steatosis, Rather Than Underlying Obesity, Increases the Risk of Infection and Hospitalization for COVID-19 - PubMed


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Abstract

Objective: Obesity is a risk factor for SARS-COV2 infection and is often associated with hepatic steatosis. The aim of this study was to determine if pre-existing hepatic steatosis affects the risk of infection and severity for COVID-19. Design: Prospective cohort study (UK Biobank). Univariate and stepwise multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed on liver phenotypic biomarkers to determine if these variables increased risk of testing positive and being hospitalized for COVID-19; then compared to previously described risk factors associated with COVID-19, including age, ethnicity, gender, obesity, socio-economic status. Setting: UK biobank study. Participants: 502,506 participants (healthy at baseline) in the UK Biobank, of whom 41,791 underwent MRI (aged 50-83) for assessment of liver fat, liver fibro-inflammatory disease, and liver iron. Positive COVID-19 test was determined from UK testing data, starting in March 2020 and censored in January 2021. Primary and Secondary Outcome Measures: Liver fat measured as proton density fat fraction (PDFF%) MRI and body mass index (BMI, Kg/m2) to assess prior to February 2020 using MRI of the liver to assess hepatic steatosis. Results: Within the imaged cohort (n = 41, 791), 4,458 had been tested and 1,043 (2.49% of the imaged population) tested positive for COVID-19. Individuals with fatty liver (≥10%) were at increased risk of testing positive (OR: 1.35, p = 0.007) and those participants with obesity and fatty liver, were at increased risk of hospitalization with a positive test result by 5.14 times (p = 0.0006). Conclusions: UK Biobank data revealed obese individuals with fatty liver disease were at increased risk of infection and hospitalization for COVID-19. Public policy measures and personalized medicine should be considered in order to protect these high-risk individuals.

Keywords: COVID-19; biomarker; disease severity; liver fat; risk factor.

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Conflict of interest statement

Perspectum Ltd is a privately funded commercial enterprise that develops medical devices to address unmet clinical needs, including LiverMultiScan®. RB is the CEO and founder of Perspectum. AR-F, AD, RN, JM, and MK are employees of Perspectum. AS: None for this project. AS is President of Sanyal Biotechnology and has stock options in Genfit, Akarna, Tiziana, Indalo, Durect Inversago and Galmed. He has served as a consultant to Astra Zeneca, Nitto Denko, Conatus, Nimbus, Salix, Tobira, Takeda, Jannsen, Gilead, Terns, Birdrock, Merck, Valeant, Boehringer-Ingelheim, Bristol Myers Squibb, Lilly, Hemoshear, Zafgen, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Exhalenz and Genfit. He has been an unpaid consultant to Intercept, Echosens, Immuron, Galectin, Fractyl, Syntlogic, Affimune, Chemomab, Zydus, Nordic Bioscience, Albireo, Prosciento, Surrozen. His institution has received grant support from Gilead, Salix, Tobira, Bristol Myers, Shire, Intercept, Merck, Astra Zeneca, Malinckrodt, Cumberland and Novartis. He receives royalties from Elsevier and UptoDate.

Figures

👁 Figure 1
Figure 1
Summary of UKB data available.
👁 Figure 2
Figure 2
Stepwise increase in percentage of (A) participants testing positive for COVID-19 and (B) being hospitalized with a positive test result. Stratification based on pre-existing fatty liver disease. COVID-19, Coronavirus disease.
👁 Figure 3
Figure 3
Multivariate stepwise logistic regression, discriminators of being positive hospitalized participants vs. positive non-hospitalized. OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; BMI, body mass index.
👁 Figure 4
Figure 4
Representative LiverMultiScan images from the UKB cohort, showing multivariate analysis of the “hepato-metabolic risk” variable. BMI <30 Kg/m2 and Liver fat <10% was used as reference healthy population. Odds ratio and confidence intervals of the associations between obesity and liver fat are presented for hospitalized with a positive test result participants vs. non-hospitalized positive patients. BMI, body mass index; OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval. Significance is indicated by **p ≤ 0.01. Reproduced by kind permission of UK Biobank©.

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