论文标题
COVID-19患者的严重程度和死亡率的性别差异:汇总文献分析的证据和综合生物信息学分析的见解
Sex Differences in Severity and Mortality Among Patients With COVID-19: Evidence from Pooled Literature Analysis and Insights from Integrated Bioinformatic Analysis
论文作者
论文摘要
目的:对当前研究进行荟萃分析,以检查COVID-19患者的严重程度和死亡率性别差异,并确定基于这些差异的潜在机制。方法:我们进行了系统的综述,以对观察性研究的数据进行整理,以检查性别差异与Covid-19的临床结果的关联。 PubMed,Web of Science和四个预印式服务器进行了搜索。在可能的情况下,使用荟萃分析提取并分析了数据,另有摘要数据否则呈现。分析了公开可用的大量RNA测序(RNA-SEQ),单细胞RNA测序(SCRNA-SEQ)和染色质免疫沉淀测序(CHIP-SEQ)数据,以探索观察到的关联的潜在机制。结果:39项研究符合纳入标准,代表77932例患者,其中41510(53.3%)为男性。与女性相比,男性患严重病例的风险显着增加。此外,与女性组相比,男性群体的汇总比值比(OR)的汇总比(OR)表明男性的死亡率显着更高。来自SCRNA-Seq的数据表明,男性具有高度表达ACE2的肺肺泡II型细胞的数量高于女性。存在基于性别的免疫学差异。雄激素受体(AR)的表达与ACE2正相关,并且有证据表明AR可能直接调节ACE2的表达。结论:这项荟萃分析检测到COVID-19的雄性人群的严重程度和死亡率增加,这可能归因于肺部细胞组成和免疫学微环境的基于性别的差异。宿主细胞受体ACE2可能受AR信号通路调节,AR信号通路被确定为预防和治疗男性SARS-COV-2感染的潜在靶标。
Objective: To conduct a meta-analysis of current studies that examined sex differences in severity and mortality in patients with COVID-19, and identify potential mechanisms underpinning these differences. Methods: We performed a systematic review to collate data from observational studies examining associations of sex differences with clinical outcomes of COVID-19. PubMed, Web of Science and four preprint servers were searched for relevant studies. Data were extracted and analyzed using meta-analysis where possible, with summary data presented otherwise. Publicly available bulk RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), and chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) data were analyzed to explore the potential mechanisms underlying the observed association. Results: 39 studies met inclusion criteria, representing 77932 patients, of which 41510 (53.3%) were males. Men were at a markedly increased risk of developing severe cases compared with women. Furthermore, the pooled odds ratio (OR) of mortality for male group compared with the female group indicated significant higher mortality rate for male. Data from scRNA-seq suggest that men have a higher amount of ACE2-expressing pulmonary alveolar type II cells than women. Sex-based immunological differences exist. The expression of androgen receptor (AR) is positively correlated with ACE2, and there is evidence that AR may directly regulate the expression of ACE2. Conclusions: This meta-analysis detected an increased severity and mortality rate in the male populations with COVID-19, which might be attributable to the sex-based differences in cellular compositions and immunological microenvironments of the lung. The host cell receptor ACE2 is likely regulated by AR signaling pathway, which is identified as a potential target for prevention and treatment of SARS-Cov-2 infections in men.