Plasma steroid concentrations reflect acute disease severity and normalise during recovery in people hospitalised with COVID-19

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Kerri Devine, Clark D. Russell, Giovanny R. Blanco, Brian R. Walker, Natalie Z. M. Homer, Scott G. Denham, Joanna P. Simpson, Olivia C. Leavy, Omer Elneima, Hamish J. C. McAuley, Aarti Shikotra, Amisha Singapuri, Marco Sereno, Ruth M. Saunders, Victoria C. Harris, Linzy Houchen-Wolloff, Neil J. Greening, Nazir I. Lone, Mathew Thorpe, William Greenhalf, James D. Chalmers, Ling-Pei Ho, Alex Horsley, Michael Marks, Betty Raman, Shona C. Moore, Jake Dunning, Malcolm G. Semple, Ruth Andrew, Louise V. Wain, Rachael A. Evans, Christopher E. Brightling, John Kenneth Baillie, Rebecca M. Reynolds, The ISARIC4C Investigators and PHOSP-COVID Study Collaborative Group
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective

Endocrine systems are disrupted in acute illness, and symptoms reported following coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are similar to those found with clinical hormone deficiencies. We hypothesised that people with severe acute COVID-19 and with post-COVID symptoms have glucocorticoid and sex hormone deficiencies.

Design/Patients

Samples were obtained for analysis from two UK multicentre cohorts during hospitalisation with COVID-19 (International Severe Acute Respiratory Infection Consortium/World Health Organisation [WHO] Clinical Characterization Protocol for Severe Emerging Infections in the UK study), and at follow-up 5 months after hospitalisation (Post-hospitalisation COVID-19 study).

Measurements

Plasma steroids were quantified by liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. Steroid concentrations were compared against disease severity (WHO ordinal scale) and validated symptom scores. Data are presented as geometric mean (SD).

Results

In the acute cohort (n = 239, 66.5% male), plasma cortisol concentration increased with disease severity (cortisol 753.3 [1.6] vs. 429.2 [1.7] nmol/L in fatal vs. least severe, p < .001). In males, testosterone concentrations decreased with severity (testosterone 1.2 [2.2] vs. 6.9 [1.9] nmol/L in fatal vs. least severe, p < .001). In the follow-up cohort (n = 198, 62.1% male, 68.9% ongoing symptoms, 165 [121–192] days postdischarge), plasma cortisol concentrations (275.6 [1.5] nmol/L) did not differ with in-hospital severity, perception of recovery, or patient-reported symptoms. Male testosterone concentrations (12.6 [1.5] nmol/L) were not related to in-hospital severity, perception of recovery or symptom scores.

Conclusions

Circulating glucocorticoids in patients hospitalised with COVID-19 reflect acute illness, with a marked rise in cortisol and fall in male testosterone. These findings are not observed 5 months from discharge. The lack of association between hormone concentrations and common post-COVID symptoms suggests steroid insufficiency does not play a causal role in this condition.

Abstract Image

血浆类固醇浓度反映了急性疾病的严重程度,并在 COVID-19 住院患者恢复期间趋于正常。
目的:内分泌系统在急性疾病时会发生紊乱,据报道,2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)后的症状与临床激素缺乏症的症状相似。我们假设,患有严重急性COVID-19并伴有COVID后症状的人存在糖皮质激素和性激素缺乏症:设计/患者:我们从英国两个多中心队列中采集了样本,用于分析COVID-19患者住院期间(国际严重急性呼吸道感染联盟/世界卫生组织[WHO]英国严重新发感染临床特征协议研究)和住院5个月后的随访(COVID-19住院后研究):血浆类固醇通过液相色谱-质谱法进行定量。类固醇浓度与疾病严重程度(WHO顺序量表)和有效症状评分进行比较。数据以几何平均数(SD)表示:结果:在急性组群(n = 239,66.5% 为男性)中,血浆皮质醇浓度随病情严重程度而增加(致命与最严重患者的皮质醇浓度分别为 753.3 [1.6] nmol/L 与 429.2 [1.7] nmol/L,p 结论:血浆皮质醇浓度随病情严重程度而增加:COVID-19 住院患者的循环糖皮质激素反映了急性疾病,皮质醇明显升高,雄性睾酮下降。这些结果在出院后 5 个月内没有观察到。激素浓度与 COVID 后的常见症状之间缺乏关联,这表明类固醇不足在这种疾病中并不起因作用。
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来源期刊
Clinical Endocrinology
Clinical Endocrinology 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
3.10%
发文量
192
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Clinical Endocrinology publishes papers and reviews which focus on the clinical aspects of endocrinology, including the clinical application of molecular endocrinology. It does not publish papers relating directly to diabetes care and clinical management. It features reviews, original papers, commentaries, correspondence and Clinical Questions. Clinical Endocrinology is essential reading not only for those engaged in endocrinological research but also for those involved primarily in clinical practice.
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