Individual factors including age, BMI and heritable factors underlie temperature variation in sickness and in health: an observational, multi-cohort study

Author:

Penfold Rose S12ORCID,Zazzara Maria Beatrice13,Österdahl Marc F2,Welch Carly4,Ni Lochlainn Mary1,Freidin Maxim B1,Bowyer Ruth C E1,Thompson Ellen1,Antonelli Michela5,Tan Yu Xian Rachel6,Sudre Carole H5,Modat Marc5,Murray Benjamin5,Wolf Jonathan7,Ourselin Sebastien5,Veenith Tonny4,Lord Janet M4,Steves Claire J1,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Twin Research and Genetic Epidemiology, School of Life Course Sciences, King’s College London

2. Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust

3. Department of Gerontology, Neuroscience and Orthopedics, Sacred Heart Catholic University, Rome, Italy

4. Institute of Inflammation and Ageing, University of Birmingham, B15 2TT, Birmingham, UK

5. School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King’s College London, SE17EH, London, UK

6. Department of Medicine, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, 123 St Stephen Green, Dublin 2, Ireland

7. Zoe Global Limited, London SE1 7RW, UK

Abstract

Abstract Background Ageing affects immunity, potentially altering fever response to infection. We assess effects of biological variables on basal temperature, and during COVID-19 infection, proposing an updated temperature threshold for older adults ≥65 years. Methods Participants were from four cohorts: 1089 unaffected adult TwinsUK volunteers; 520 adults with emergency admission to a London hospital with RT-PCR confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection; 757 adults with emergency admission to a Birmingham hospital with RT-PCR confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and 3972 adult community-based COVID Symptom Study participants self-reporting a positive RT-PCR test. Heritability was assessed using saturated and univariate ACE models; mixed-effect and multivariable linear regression examined associations between temperature, age, sex and BMI; multivariable logistic regression examined associations between fever (≥37.8°C) and age; receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis was used to identify temperature threshold for adults ≥ 65 years. Results Among unaffected volunteers, lower BMI (p=0.001), and increasing age (p<0.001) associated with lower basal temperature. Basal temperature showed a heritability of 47% 95% Confidence Interval 18-57%). In COVID-19+ participants, increasing age was associated with lower temperatures in Birmingham and community-based cohorts (p<0.001). For each additional year of age, participants were 1% less likely to demonstrate a fever ≥37.8°C (OR 0.99; p<0.001). Combining healthy and COVID-19+ participants, a temperature of 37.4°C in adults ≥65 years had similar sensitivity and specificity to 37.8°C in adults <65 years for discriminating infection. Conclusions Ageing affects temperature in health and acute infection, with significant heritability, indicating genetic factors contribute to temperature regulation. Our observations suggest a lower threshold (37.4°C/97.3°F) for identifying fever in older adults ≥65 years.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging

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