4.7 Editorial Material

Weight loss, malnutrition, and cachexia in COVID-19: facts and numbers

Journal

JOURNAL OF CACHEXIA SARCOPENIA AND MUSCLE
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 9-13

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcsm.12674

Keywords

COVID-19; Cachexia; Weight loss; Malnutrition; Epidemiology

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Patients with COVID-19 are prone to significant weight loss and clinical cachexia. Around 37% of patients experience weight loss of ≥5%, with factors such as elevated C-reactive protein levels, impaired renal function, and longer disease duration being associated with weight loss. Assessing weight loss is crucial in evaluating cachexia in COVID-19, and treatment should focus on nutritional support and rehabilitative exercise.
Patients with COVID-19 disease are prone to develop significant weight loss and clinical cachexia. Three reports with altogether 589 patients that reported on weight loss and cachexia in COVID-19 were identified. Disease severity of patients and the timing of the assessment during the disease course in these patients were variable-65 patients (11%) were intensive care treated at the time of assessment, and 183 (31%) were cared for in sub-intensive or intermediate care structures. The frequency of weight loss >= 5% (that defines cachexia) was 37% (range 29-52%). Correlates of weight loss occurrence were reported to be raised C-reactive protein levels, impaired renal function status, and longer duration of COVID-19 disease. Underweight status by WHO criteria (BMI < 18.5 kg/m(2)) was only observed in 4% of patients analysing data from seven studies with 6661 patients. Cachexia assessment in COVID-19 needs assessment of weight loss. COVID-19 associated cachexia is understood to affect muscle and fat tissue as is also seen in many other chronic illness-associated forms of cachexia. There are many factors that can contribute to body wasting in COVID-19, and they include loss of appetite and taste, fever and inflammation, immobilization, as well as general malnutrition, catabolic-anabolic imbalance, endocrine dysfunction, and organ-specific complications of COVID-19 disease such as cardiac and renal dysfunction. Treatment of COVID-19 patients should include a focus on nutritional support and rehabilitative exercise whenever possible. Specific anti-cachectic therapies for COVID-19 do not exist, but constitute a high medical need to prevent long-term disability due to acute COVID-19 disease.

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