Diabetes and metabolic syndrome as risk factors for COVID-19

Cargando...
Miniatura

Fecha

Fecha

2020

Director de trabajo de grado

Título de la revista

Abrir versión en línea

ISSN de la revista

Título del volumen

Editor

Clinical Research and Reviews

Resumen

Background and aims: Clinical evidence exists that patients with diabetes are at higher risk for Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We investigated the physiological origins of this clinical observation linking diabetes with severity and adverse outcome of COVID-19. Methods: Publication mining was applied to reveal common physiological contexts in which diabetes and COVID-19 have been investigated simultaneously. Overall, we have acquired 1,121,078 publications from PubMed in the time span between 01-01-2000 and 17-04-2020, and extracted knowledge graphs interconnecting the topics related to diabetes and COVID-19. Results: The Data Mining revealed three pathophysiological pathways linking diabetes and COVID-19. The first pathway indicates a higher risk for COVID-19 because of a dysregulation of Angiotensinconverting enzyme 2. The other two important physiological links between diabetes and COVID-19 are liver dysfunction and chronic systemic inflammation. A deep network analysis has suggested clinical biomarkers predicting the higher risk: Hypertension, elevated serum Alanine aminotransferase, high Interleukin-6, and low Lymphocytes count. Conclusions: The revealed biomarkers can be applied directly in clinical practice. For newly infected patients, the medical history needs to be checked for evidence of a long-term, chronic dysregulation of these biomarkers. In particular, patients with diabetes, but also those with prediabetic state, deserve special attention.

Descripción

Palabras clave

SARS-Coronavirus-2, Hypertension, ACE2, Liver dysfunction, Inflammation

Citación

Aprobación

Revisión

Complementado por

Referenciado por