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Sex hormone and metabolic dysregulations are associated with critical illness in male Covid-19 patients

Authors :
Lothar Kreienbrock
Henning Jacobsen
Karin Klingel
Stephanie Stanelle-Bertram
Jens Aberle
Fabian Stoll
Zacharias Mueller
Dominik Jarczak
Andreas Meinhardt
Andreas Kloetgen
Thomas Renné
Bettina Schneider
Ann Parplys
Maria Schroeder
Axel Nierhaus
Stefan Kluge
Jens Hiller
berfin schaumburg
Guelsah Gabriel
Manuela Peschka
Tian Bai
Hartmut Schlueter
Joerg Heeren
Alice C. McHardy
Martin Zickler
Geraldine de Heer
Sven Peine
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Background. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) continues to spread worldwide and pose a major public health burden. There is increasing evidence that men are more likely to die from SARS-CoV-2 infection than women. However, underlying factors that mediate the observed sex bias in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) remain unknown. Methods. In this retrospective cohort, we included COVID-19 patients who were admitted to an Intensive Care Unit at the University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany. We obtained demographic data of all patients who were discharged or had died by 29th April 2020. We systematically analyzed sex hormones as well as cytokine and chemokine responses in male and female patients with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections upon hospital admission. We used uni- and multivariable linear regression methods to identify potential risk factors for disease severity in males and females. Findings. All enrolled patients (n=45; n=35 males and n=10 females) presented comorbidities with hypertension being the most common (45.7% in males; 40% in females), followed by cancer (35% in males; 40% in females), obesity (34.3% in males and 30% in females), type II diabetes (25.7% in males and 20% in females) and chronic heart diseases (8.6% in males and 0% in females). We detected that the vast majority of male COVID-19 patients present low testosterone (68.6%) and low dihydrotestosterone (48.6%) levels. In contrast, most female COVID-19 patients have elevated testosterone levels (60%) without alterations in dihydrotestosterone levels. Both, female and male COVID-19 patients may present elevated estradiol levels (45.7% in males and 40% in females). Disease severity defined by SOFA score correlates with elevated cytokine responses (e.g. IL-6) in males and IL-2 in females. In male COVID-19 patients, testosterone levels negatively correlate with inflammatory IL-2 and IFN-γ, whereas estradiol levels positively correlate with the inflammatory cytokine IL-6. Vice versa, in female COVID-19 patients, testosterone levels positively correlate with inflammatory cytokines (e.g. IL-6). Interpretation. We here show that critically ill male COVID-19 patients suffer from severe testosterone and dihydrotestosterone deficiencies. Both androgens are required to mount antiviral immune responses to combat infection in males.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cc9485096c4a8e80f14d39454199224f