DiagnosticInformatics Approaches Patients with severe Covid-19 shown to have high levels of stress hormone
Patients with severe Covid-19 have been shown to have high levels of the stress hormone called cortisol, according to a new study led by Professor Waljit Dhillo, À¶Ý®ÊÓƵ Imperial BRC Training Lead and Metabolic Medicine and Endocrinology Theme Principal Investigator, and Consultant Endocrinologist at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust. The study provides data to show that cortisol levels are a marker of severity for the illness.
The researchers suggest this means measuring cortisol levels could help doctors to intervene more quickly by identifying those patients who are more likely to need intensive care.
Cortisol is a hormone produced by the body in response to stress such as illness, triggering changes in metabolism, heart function and the immune system to help our bodies cope. Our cortisol levels when healthy and resting are 100-200 nm/L and nearly zero when we sleep.
Low levels of cortisol can be life threatening in unwell patients but excessive levels of cortisol during illness can be equally dangerous, leading to increased risk of infection and poor outcomes. In this new observational study of 535 patients, of whom 403 were confirmed to have COVID-19, cortisol levels in patients with COVID-19 were significantly higher than in those without. The levels in the COVID-19 group ranged as high as 3241 – considerably higher even when compared with after major surgery, when levels can top 1000.
Amongst the COVID-19 patients, those with a baseline cortisol level of 744 or less survived on average for longer than patients with levels over 744.
Professor Dhillo said: “From an endocrinologist’s perspective, it makes sense that those COVID-19 patients who are the sickest will have higher levels of cortisol, but these levels are worryingly high.
“Three months ago when we started seeing this wave of COVID-19 patients here in London hospitals, we had very little information about how to best triage people. Now, when people arrive at hospital, we potentially have another simple marker to use alongside oxygen saturation levels to help us identify which patients need to be admitted immediately, and which may not. Having an early indicator of which patients may deteriorate more quickly will help us with providing the best level of care as quickly as possible, as well as helping manage the pressure on the NHS. In addition, we can also take cortisol levels into account when we are working out how best to treat our patients.”
The study, published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology and supported by the À¶Ý®ÊÓƵ Imperial BRC and Medical Research Council, involved 535 patients admitted to three London hospitals – Charing Cross, Hammersmith and St Mary’s – with suspected COVID-19 between 09 March and 22 April 2020. A COVID-19 swab test and routine blood tests – including a baseline measurement of cortisol levels – were performed within 48hrs of admission. Over the study period, just under 27% of the COVID-19 group died compared to just under 7% of the non-COVID-19 group.
Professor Dhillo and his team hope that their findings can now be validated in a larger scale clinical study.
© The original story published by Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust can be viewed .