Published December 30, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Restricted

Dataset related to article "Thyrotoxicosis in patients with COVID-19: the THYRCOV study"

  • 1. Humanitas Clinical and Research Center, IRCCS, Rozzano (MI) AND Humanitas University, Pieve Emanuele (MI)
  • 2. Humanitas Clinical and Research Center, IRCCS, Rozzano (MI)
  • 3. Humanitas Clinical and Research Center, IRCCS, Rozzano (MI) AND Humanitas University, Pieve Emanuele (MI)

Description

This record contains data related to article "Thyrotoxicosis in patients with COVID-19: the THYRCOV study"

Abstract

Objective: This study assessed thyroid function in patients affected by the coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19), based on the hypothesis that the cytokine storm associated with COVID-19 may influence thyroid function and/or the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) may directly act on thyroid cells, such as previously demonstrated for SARS-CoV-1 infection.

Design and methods: This single-center study was retrospective and consisted in evaluating thyroid function tests and serum interleukin-6 (IL-6) values in 287 consecutive patients (193 males, median age: 66 years, range: 27-92) hospitalized for COVID-19 in non-intensive care units.

Results: Fifty-eight patients (20.2%) were found with thyrotoxicosis (overt in 31 cases), 15 (5.2%) with hypothyroidism (overt in only 2 cases), and 214 (74.6%) with normal thyroid function. Serum thyrotropin (TSH) values were inversely correlated with age of patients (rho -0.27; P < 0.001) and IL-6 (rho -0.41; P < 0.001). In the multivariate analysis, thyrotoxicosis resulted to be significantly associated with higher IL-6 (odds ratio: 3.25, 95% confidence interval: 1.97-5.36; P < 0.001), whereas the association with age of patients was lost (P = 0.09).

Conclusions: This study provides first evidence that COVID-19 may be associated with high risk of thyrotoxicosis in relationship with systemic immune activation induced by the SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Files

Restricted

The record is publicly accessible, but files are restricted to users with access.

Request access

If you would like to request access to these files, please fill out the form below.

You need to satisfy these conditions in order for this request to be accepted:

This set of data is accessible only upon request because it includes sensitive data.

Please write your request to biblioteca@humanitas.it

You are currently not logged in. Do you have an account? Log in here

Additional details

Related works

Is supplement to
10.1530/EJE-20-0335 (DOI)
32698147 (PMID)