International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Nov 2024)

Association between FTO polymorphism and COVID-19 mortality among older adults: A population-based cohort study

  • Jaroslav A. Hubacek,
  • Nadezda Capkova,
  • Martin Bobak,
  • Hynek Pikhart

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 148
p. 107232

Abstract

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Objectives: COVID-19 caused a global pandemic with millions of deaths. Fat mass and obesity-associated gene (FTO) (alias m6A RNA demethylase) and its functional rs17817449 polymorphism are candidates to influence COVID-19-associated mortality since methylation status of viral nucleic acids is an important factor influencing viral viability. Methods: We tested a population-based cohort of 5233 subjects (aged 63-87 years in 2020) where 70 persons died from COVID-19 and 394 from other causes during the pandemic period. Results: The frequency of GG homozygotes was higher among those who died from COVID-19 (34%) than among survivors (19%) or deaths from other causes (20%), P <0.005. After multiple adjustments, GG homozygotes had a higher risk of death from COVID-19 with odds ratio = 2.01 (95% confidence interval; 1.19-3.41, P <0.01) compared with carriers of at least one T allele. The FTO polymorphism was not associated with mortality from other causes. Conclusions: Our results suggest that FTO variability is a significant predictor of COVID-19-associated mortality in Caucasians.

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