by Kooistra, Emma J.; Brinkman, Sylvia; van der Voort, Peter
H. J.; de Keizer, Nicolette F.; Dongelmans, Dave A.; Kox, Matthijs; Pickkers,
Peter
Critical Care Medicine: January 2022
- Volume 50 - Issue 1 - p e1-e10
OBJECTIVES:
Obesity is a risk factor for severe coronavirus disease 2019
and might play a role in its pathophysiology. It is unknown whether body mass
index is related to clinical outcome following ICU admission, as observed in
various other categories of critically ill patients. We investigated the
relationship between body mass index and inhospital mortality in critically ill
coronavirus disease 2019 patients and in cohorts of ICU patients with non-severe
acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 viral pneumonia, bacterial
pneumonia, and multiple trauma.
DESIGN:
Multicenter observational cohort study.
SETTING:
Eighty-two Dutch ICUs participating in the Dutch National
Intensive Care Evaluation quality registry.
PATIENTS:
Thirty-five–thousand five-hundred six critically ill
patients.
INTERVENTIONS:
None.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:
Patient characteristics and clinical outcomes were compared
between four cohorts (coronavirus disease 2019, nonsevere acute respiratory
syndrome coronavirus 2 viral pneumonia, bacterial pneumonia, and multiple
trauma patients) and between body mass index categories within cohorts.
Adjusted analyses of the relationship between body mass index and inhospital
mortality within each cohort were performed using multivariable logistic
regression. Coronavirus disease 2019 patients were more likely male, had a
higher body mass index, lower Pao2/Fio2 ratio, and were more likely
mechanically ventilated during the first 24 hours in the ICU compared with the
other cohorts. Coronavirus disease 2019 patients had longer ICU and hospital
length of stay, and higher inhospital mortality. Odds ratios for inhospital
mortality for patients with body mass index greater than or equal to 35 kg/m2 compared
with normal weight in the coronavirus disease 2019, nonsevere acute respiratory
syndrome coronavirus 2 viral pneumonia, bacterial pneumonia, and trauma cohorts
were 1.15 (0.79–1.67), 0.64 (0.43–0.95), 0.73 (0.61–0.87), and 0.81
(0.57–1.15), respectively.
CONCLUSIONS:
The obesity paradox, which is the inverse association
between body mass index and mortality in critically ill patients, is not
present in ICU patients with coronavirus disease 2019–related respiratory
failure, in contrast to nonsevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
viral and bacterial respiratory infections.
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