Severe Obesity Is Associated With Higher In-Hospital Mortality In A Cohort Of Bronx CoViD-19 Patients

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Published on May 20, 2020, 2:53 pm
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A team of researchers at Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, just published a manuscript about the independent association of severe obesity and death from CoViD-19 in the first 200 patients that were admitted for CoViD-19 in the Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx.

The team’s work was published in Metabolism, a prestigious journal in the field of obesity and metabolism, in cooperation with the leader in obesity research nationally, Dr. Mantzoros from Harvard.

Abstract

Background & Aims

New York is the current epicenter of Coronavirus disease 2019 (CoViD-19) pandemic. The underrepresented minorities, where the prevalence of obesity is higher, appear to be affected disproportionately. Our objectives were to assess the characteristics and early outcomes of patients hospitalized with CoViD-19 in the Bronx and investigate whether obesity is associated with worse outcomes independently from age, gender and other comorbidities.

Methods

This retrospective study included the first 200 patients admitted to a tertiary medical center with CoViD-19. The electronic medical records were reviewed at least three weeks after admission. The primary endpoint was in-hospital mortality.

Results

200 patients were included (female sex: 102, African American: 102). The median BMI was 30 kg/m2. The median age was 64 years. Hypertension (76%), hyperlipidemia (46.2%), and diabetes (39.5%) were the three most common comorbidities. Fever (86%), cough (76.5%), and dyspnea (68%) were the three most common symptoms. 24% died during hospitalization (BMI<25 kg/m2: 31.6%, BMI 25-34 kg/m2: 17.2%, BMI≥35 kg/m2: 34.8%, p= 0.03). Increasing age (analyzed in quartiles), male sex, BMI≥35 kg/m2 (reference: BMI 25-34 kg/m2), heart failure, CAD, and CKD or ESRD were found to have a significant univariate association with mortality. The multivariate analysis demonstrated that BMI≥35 kg/m2 (reference: BMI 25-34 kg/m2, OR: 3.78; 95% CI: 1.45 – 9.83; p=0.006), male sex (OR: 2.74; 95% CI: 1.25 – 5.98; p=0.011) and increasing age (analyzed in quartiles, OR: 1.73; 95% CI: 1.13 – 2.63; p=0.011) were independently associated with higher in-hospital mortality. Similarly, age, male sex, BMI≥35 kg/m2 and current or prior smoking were significant predictors for increasing oxygenation requirements in the multivariate analysis, while male sex, age and BMI≥35 kg/m2 were significant predictors in the multivariate analysis for the outcome of intubation.

Conclusions

In this cohort of hospitalized patients with CoViD-19 in a minority-predominant population, severe obesity, increasing age, and male sex were independently associated with higher in-hospital mortality and in general worse in-hospital outcomes.

The manuscript and its highlights are available here, along with some interesting and informative graphs.

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Jonas Bronck is the pseudonym under which we publish and manage the content and operations of The Bronx Daily.™ | Bronx.com - the largest daily news publication in the borough of "the" Bronx with over 1.5 million annual readers. Publishing under the alias Jonas Bronck is our humble way of paying tribute to the person, whose name lives on in the name of our beloved borough.