Rare atopy in COVID‐19 patients or COVID‐19 famine in atopic patients?

Background There are conflicting results in the literature regarding the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID‐19 patients. The effect of having an allergic disease on COVID‐19 disease severity has been little studied. Purpose In this study, we tried to determine the frequency of allergic diseases...

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Published inDermatologic therapy Vol. 34; no. 1; pp. e14581 - n/a
Main Authors Naziroğlu, Tuğba, Aksu, Kurtuluş
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken, USA John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.01.2021
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Abstract Background There are conflicting results in the literature regarding the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID‐19 patients. The effect of having an allergic disease on COVID‐19 disease severity has been little studied. Purpose In this study, we tried to determine the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID‐19 patients and the effect of having an allergic disease on COVID‐19 disease severity. Design/Method A retrospective cross‐sectional study was conducted in patients diagnosed with COVID‐19 in a state hospital in Istanbul, Turkey. Patients were contacted by phone and those who approved to participate in the study were questioned about their sociodemographic characteristics, body mass index, smoking history, and about their atopic status. Rate of atopic diseases among mild and severe COVID‐19 patients and risk estimates for mild disease in atopic and non‐atopic COVID‐19 patients were calculated. Results Study population consisted of 235 adults with COVID‐19 (mean age, 45.3 years [standard deviation, 15.0 years]; 139 [59.1%] male). Among study population, 16 (6.8%) subjects had one of the three atopic symptoms, which were wheezing, rhinitis, or eczema. Among the subjects with atopic status, four (1.7%) subjects had wheezing, eight (3.4%) had rhinitis, and four (1.7%) had eczema within the last 12 months. Although atopic status is associated with 3.1 times higher odds for mild disease, being atopic or not being atopic was not found to be associated with COVID‐19 severity (P = .054). Conclusion The information that atopic diseases are less common in COVID‐19 patients may guide clinical risk classification.
AbstractList There are conflicting results in the literature regarding the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID-19 patients. The effect of having an allergic disease on COVID-19 disease severity has been little studied. In this study, we tried to determine the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID-19 patients and the effect of having an allergic disease on COVID-19 disease severity. A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted in patients diagnosed with COVID-19 in a state hospital in Istanbul, Turkey. Patients were contacted by phone and those who approved to participate in the study were questioned about their sociodemographic characteristics, body mass index, smoking history, and about their atopic status. Rate of atopic diseases among mild and severe COVID-19 patients and risk estimates for mild disease in atopic and non-atopic COVID-19 patients were calculated. Study population consisted of 235 adults with COVID-19 (mean age, 45.3 years [standard deviation, 15.0 years]; 139 [59.1%] male). Among study population, 16 (6.8%) subjects had one of the three atopic symptoms, which were wheezing, rhinitis, or eczema. Among the subjects with atopic status, four (1.7%) subjects had wheezing, eight (3.4%) had rhinitis, and four (1.7%) had eczema within the last 12 months. Although atopic status is associated with 3.1 times higher odds for mild disease, being atopic or not being atopic was not found to be associated with COVID-19 severity (P = .054). The information that atopic diseases are less common in COVID-19 patients may guide clinical risk classification.
Background There are conflicting results in the literature regarding the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID‐19 patients. The effect of having an allergic disease on COVID‐19 disease severity has been little studied. Purpose In this study, we tried to determine the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID‐19 patients and the effect of having an allergic disease on COVID‐19 disease severity. Design/Method A retrospective cross‐sectional study was conducted in patients diagnosed with COVID‐19 in a state hospital in Istanbul, Turkey. Patients were contacted by phone and those who approved to participate in the study were questioned about their sociodemographic characteristics, body mass index, smoking history, and about their atopic status. Rate of atopic diseases among mild and severe COVID‐19 patients and risk estimates for mild disease in atopic and non‐atopic COVID‐19 patients were calculated. Results Study population consisted of 235 adults with COVID‐19 (mean age, 45.3 years [standard deviation, 15.0 years]; 139 [59.1%] male). Among study population, 16 (6.8%) subjects had one of the three atopic symptoms, which were wheezing, rhinitis, or eczema. Among the subjects with atopic status, four (1.7%) subjects had wheezing, eight (3.4%) had rhinitis, and four (1.7%) had eczema within the last 12 months. Although atopic status is associated with 3.1 times higher odds for mild disease, being atopic or not being atopic was not found to be associated with COVID‐19 severity (P = .054). Conclusion The information that atopic diseases are less common in COVID‐19 patients may guide clinical risk classification.
There are conflicting results in the literature regarding the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID-19 patients. The effect of having an allergic disease on COVID-19 disease severity has been little studied.BACKGROUNDThere are conflicting results in the literature regarding the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID-19 patients. The effect of having an allergic disease on COVID-19 disease severity has been little studied.In this study, we tried to determine the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID-19 patients and the effect of having an allergic disease on COVID-19 disease severity.PURPOSEIn this study, we tried to determine the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID-19 patients and the effect of having an allergic disease on COVID-19 disease severity.A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted in patients diagnosed with COVID-19 in a state hospital in Istanbul, Turkey. Patients were contacted by phone and those who approved to participate in the study were questioned about their sociodemographic characteristics, body mass index, smoking history, and about their atopic status. Rate of atopic diseases among mild and severe COVID-19 patients and risk estimates for mild disease in atopic and non-atopic COVID-19 patients were calculated.DESIGN/METHODA retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted in patients diagnosed with COVID-19 in a state hospital in Istanbul, Turkey. Patients were contacted by phone and those who approved to participate in the study were questioned about their sociodemographic characteristics, body mass index, smoking history, and about their atopic status. Rate of atopic diseases among mild and severe COVID-19 patients and risk estimates for mild disease in atopic and non-atopic COVID-19 patients were calculated.Study population consisted of 235 adults with COVID-19 (mean age, 45.3 years [standard deviation, 15.0 years]; 139 [59.1%] male). Among study population, 16 (6.8%) subjects had one of the three atopic symptoms, which were wheezing, rhinitis, or eczema. Among the subjects with atopic status, four (1.7%) subjects had wheezing, eight (3.4%) had rhinitis, and four (1.7%) had eczema within the last 12 months. Although atopic status is associated with 3.1 times higher odds for mild disease, being atopic or not being atopic was not found to be associated with COVID-19 severity (P = .054).RESULTSStudy population consisted of 235 adults with COVID-19 (mean age, 45.3 years [standard deviation, 15.0 years]; 139 [59.1%] male). Among study population, 16 (6.8%) subjects had one of the three atopic symptoms, which were wheezing, rhinitis, or eczema. Among the subjects with atopic status, four (1.7%) subjects had wheezing, eight (3.4%) had rhinitis, and four (1.7%) had eczema within the last 12 months. Although atopic status is associated with 3.1 times higher odds for mild disease, being atopic or not being atopic was not found to be associated with COVID-19 severity (P = .054).The information that atopic diseases are less common in COVID-19 patients may guide clinical risk classification.CONCLUSIONThe information that atopic diseases are less common in COVID-19 patients may guide clinical risk classification.
Author Aksu, Kurtuluş
Naziroğlu, Tuğba
AuthorAffiliation 2 Division of Immunology and Allergy, Department of Chest Diseases University of Health Sciences Atatürk Chest Diseases and Chest Surgery Education and Research Hospital Ankara Turkey
1 Pendik State Hospital Chest Diseases Clinic Istanbul Turkey
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CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1089_derm_2022_29019_pwu
crossref_primary_10_1155_2022_6510332
crossref_primary_10_1007_s00405_021_06836_z
crossref_primary_10_1186_s12890_022_02230_5
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Keywords COVID-19
atopy
eczema
SARS-CoV-2
rhinitis
wheezing
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Snippet Background There are conflicting results in the literature regarding the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID‐19 patients. The effect of having an allergic...
There are conflicting results in the literature regarding the frequency of allergic diseases in COVID-19 patients. The effect of having an allergic disease on...
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StartPage e14581
SubjectTerms Adult
Asthma
atopy
COVID-19 - complications
COVID‐19
Cross-Sectional Studies
Dermatitis, Atopic - complications
eczema
Famine
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Original
Prevalence
Retrospective Studies
rhinitis
SARS-CoV-2
Turkey - epidemiology
wheezing
Title Rare atopy in COVID‐19 patients or COVID‐19 famine in atopic patients?
URI https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fdth.14581
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33236820
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