用埃德蒙顿肥胖症分期系统预测 COVID-19 的结果。

Annals of Saudi medicine Pub Date : 2024-03-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-04 DOI:10.5144/0256-4947.2024.116
Sajjad Ali, Omar Sufyan Khan, Amira M Youssef, Iram Saba, Leena Alqahtani, Renad Abdulaziz Alduhaim, Renad Almesned
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:多项研究表明,高体重指数与 COVID-19 结果之间存在相关性。研究似乎表明,肥胖相关的合并症与较差的结果之间存在相关性:本次调查的主要目的是全面评估体重指数与肥胖相关合并症之间的相关性,以及它们对在三级医疗机构接受治疗的患者感染 COVID-19 的严重程度和后果的潜在影响:设计:回顾性队列:设置:沙特阿拉伯利雅得三级康复中心:研究包括 2020 年 3 月至 9 月期间接受治疗并通过 RT-PCR 检测出 COVID-19 阳性的所有患者。采用埃德蒙顿肥胖分期系统(EOSS)对 COVID-19 患者进行分类:主要结果指标:COVID-19相关并发症,包括肺炎和细胞因子释放综合征,以及COVID-19阴性化的时间长度:结果:患者年龄中位数(第25-75百分位数)为38(31.5-49)岁。男性多于女性,66%的患者为非沙特人。48 名患者(15.2%)属于肥胖 I 级,13 名患者(4.1%)属于肥胖 II 级。32名患者(10.2%)被划分为EOSS 1期,105名患者(33.3%)被划分为EOSS 2期,25名患者(7.9%)被划分为EOSS 3期。EOSS 1 期和 2 期以男性为主,而 3 期以女性为主。在 EOSS 3 期中,52% 的病例病情为中度,48% 的病例病情为重度:除体重指数外,EOSS还能区分COVID-19的不良预后风险。与体重正常的患者相比,超重或肥胖但仍处于 EOSS 第 1 阶段的患者出现 COVID-19 不良预后的风险较低。与单纯的体重指数相比,肥胖患者的健康状况是住院期间 COVID-19 进展的更精确指标:局限性:由于紧急护理机构能力有限,无法对所有患者的合并症和其他相关结果进行全面评估,因此某些患者可能被错误地归入 EOSS 第 2 阶段诊断,而实际上他们本应被归入第 3 阶段诊断。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Predicting COVID-19 outcomes with the Edmonton Obesity Staging System.

Background: Multiple studies have demonstrated a correlation between a high body mass index and discriminatory COVID-19 outcomes. Studies appear to indicate that there is a correlation between obesity-related comorbidities and less favorable outcomes.

Objectives: The primary aim of the current investigation is to conduct a thorough assessment of the correlation between BMI and comorbidities associated with obesity, and their potential impact on the severity and consequences of COVID-19 infection among patients receiving care in a tertiary healthcare setting.

Design: Retrospective cohort.

Settings: Tertiary rehabilitation center, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Patients and methods: The study included all individuals who received medical treatment and tested positive for COVID-19 by means of RT-PCR during the period from March to September 2020. COVID-19 patients were classified using Edmonton Obesity Staging System (EOSS).

Main outcome measures: COVID-19-related complications, including pneumonia and cytokine release syndrome, as well as the time length to COVID-19 negativization.

Sample size: 315 patients.

Results: The median (25th-75th percentiles) age of the patients was 38 (31.5-49) years old. Males outnumbered females, and 66% of patients were non-Saudis. Forty-eight patients (15.2%) had obesity class I, whereas 13 patients (4.1%) had class II. Thirty-two patients (10.2%) were classified as EOSS stage 1, 105 patients (33.3%) were classified as EOSS stage 2, and 25 patients (7.9%) were assigned to EOSS stage 3. Males predominated in EOSS stages 1 and 2, whereas females predominated in stage 3. In EOSS stage 3, 52% of cases had moderate severity and 48% had severe illness.

Conclusions: EOSS distinguishes the COVID-19 risks of poor outcomes beyond BMI. Patients who were overweight or obese but remained in the stage 1 of the EOSS had a lower risk of a poor COVID-19 outome than normal-weight patients. The health status of obese patients is a more precise indicator of the progression of COVID-19 during hospitalization than BMI alone.

Limitations: Given the limited capacity of urgent care facilities to conduct a comprehensive evaluation of comorbidities and other relevant outcomes in all patients, it is plausible that certain patients may have been erroneously classified with an EOSS stage 2 diagnosis, when in fact they ought to have been assigned a stage 3 diagnosis.

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