Circulating adipokine levels and COVID-19 severity in hospitalized patients

Author:

Flikweert Antine W.,Kobold Anneke C. Muller,van der Sar-van der Brugge Simone,Heeringa PeterORCID,Rodenhuis-Zybert Izabela A.,Bijzet Johan,Tami Adriana,van der Gun Bernardina T. F.,Wold Karin I.,Huckriede Anke,Franke Hildegard,Emmen Judith M. A.,Emous Marloes,Grootenboers Marco J. J. H.,van Meurs Matijs,van der Voort Peter H. J.ORCID,Moser JillORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Obesity is a risk factor for adverse outcomes in COVID-19, potentially driven by chronic inflammatory state due to dysregulated secretion of adipokines and cytokines. We investigated the association between plasma adipokines and COVID-19 severity, systemic inflammation, clinical parameters, and outcome of COVID-19 patients. Methods In this multi-centre prospective cross-sectional study, we collected blood samples and clinical data from COVID-19 patients. The severity of COVID-19 was classified as mild (no hospital admission), severe (ward admission), and critical (ICU admission). ICU non-COVID-19 patients were also included and plasma from healthy age, sex, and BMI-matched individuals obtained from Lifelines. Multi-analyte profiling of plasma adipokines (Leptin, Adiponectin, Resistin, Visfatin) and inflammatory markers (IL-6, TNFα, IL-10) were determined using Luminex multiplex assays. Results Between March and December 2020, 260 SARS-CoV-2 infected individuals (age: 65 [56–74] BMI 27.0 [24.4–30.6]) were included: 30 mild, 159 severe, and 71 critical patients. Circulating leptin levels were reduced in critically ill patients with a high BMI yet this decrease was absent in patients that were administered dexamethasone. Visfatin levels were higher in critical COVID-19 patients compared to non-COVID-ICU, mild and severe patients (4.7 vs 3.4, 3.0, and 3.72 ng/mL respectively, p < 0.05). Lower Adiponectin levels, but higher Resistin levels were found in severe and critical patients, compared to those that did not require hospitalization (3.65, 2.7 vs 7.9 µg/mL, p < 0.001, and 18.2, 22.0 vs 11.0 ng/mL p < 0.001). Conclusion Circulating adipokine levels are associated with COVID-19 hospitalization, i.e., the need for oxygen support (general ward), or the need for mechanical ventilation and other organ support in the ICU, but not mortality.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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