International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Dec 2022)

Dyslipidemia and Inflammation as Hallmarks of Oxidative Stress in COVID-19: A Follow-Up Study

  • Álvaro Aparisi,
  • Marta Martín-Fernández,
  • Cristina Ybarra-Falcón,
  • José Francisco Gil,
  • Manuel Carrasco-Moraleja,
  • Pedro Martínez-Paz,
  • Iván Cusácovich,
  • Hugo Gonzalo-Benito,
  • Raúl Fuertes,
  • Marta Marcos-Mangas,
  • Carolina Iglesias-Echeverría,
  • J. Alberto San Román,
  • Eduardo Tamayo,
  • David Andaluz-Ojeda,
  • Álvaro Tamayo-Velasco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232315350
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 23
p. 15350

Abstract

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Recent works have demonstrated a significant reduction in cholesterol levels and increased oxidative stress in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The cause of this alteration is not well known. This study aimed to comprehensively evaluate their possible association during the evolution of COVID-19. This is an observational prospective study. The primary endpoint was to analyze the association between lipid peroxidation, lipid, and inflammatory profiles in COVID-19 patients. A multivariate regression analysis was employed. The secondary endpoint included the long-term follow-up of lipid profiles. COVID-19 patients presented significantly lower values in their lipid profile (total, low, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol) with greater oxidative stress and inflammatory response compared to the healthy controls. Lipid peroxidation was the unique oxidative parameter with a significant association with the total cholesterol (OR: 0.982; 95% CI: 0.969–0.996; p = 0.012), IL1-RA (OR: 0.999; 95% CI: 0.998–0.999; p = 0.021) IL-6 (OR: 1.062; 95% CI: 1.017–1.110; p = 0.007), IL-7 (OR: 0.653; 95% CI: 0.433–0.986; p = 0.042) and IL-17 (OR: 1.098; 95% CI: 1.010–1.193; p = 0.028). Lipid abnormalities recovered after the initial insult during long-term follow-up (IQR 514 days); however, those with high LPO levels at hospital admission had, during long-term follow-up, an atherogenic lipid profile. Our study suggests that oxidative stress in COVID-19 is associated with derangements of the lipid profile and inflammation. Survivors experienced a recovery in their lipid profiles during long-term follow-up, but those with stronger oxidative responses had an atherogenic lipid profile.

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