Irish Daily Mail

Could this be the link between Covid-19 and obesity?

How inflammati­on could provide the key to beating killer diseases

- By LOIS ROGERS TURN TO NEXT PAGE

TYPE 2 diabetes, heart disease, Alzheimer’s, cancer, Covid-19 — apparently unconnecte­d conditions, but at the root of them all lies one problem: inflammati­on.

This is now emerging as the key factor in many diseases, and a process we need to understand better if we want to reduce our risk of everything from dementia to blocked arteries.

It has also been identified as a major driver in the fatal march of Covid-19, and explains why older people and those with lifestyle diseases are at particular risk.

Inflammati­on is a clue to what lies behind the high number of coronaviru­s deaths around the world.

But doctors hope the knowledge gained from tackling Covid-19 will help us to better understand inflammato­ry processes and suggest new approaches to the chronic diseases that plague millions.

Inflammati­on is a sign of the body’s natural response to infection. When the immune system is mobilised, the flurry of activity by defensive

cells causes by-products such as heat and skin redness, or fever when the whole system is involved.

But it is now known that obesity and chronic disease also trigger inflammati­on.

Overweight people have been shown to have higher levels of inflammato­ry messenger molecules called cytokines, which interfere with and damage normal cell functions.

AMAJOR research review, published in 2016 by the American Society for Nutrition, concluded that obesity and the health problems associated with it — such as high blood pressure, raised blood sugar levels and tummy fat — have a ‘substantia­l impact’ on the health of the immune system and defence against disease.

This effect can be seen in people’s response to vaccines.

A review of almost 90 studies — in the journal Vaccine in 2015 — showed that those with a body mass index (BMI) over 30 don’t produce antibody cells in response to vaccinatio­n against infectious diseases such as flu, tetanus and hepatitis because their immune systems are already not working properly. As a result, those people are not protected by the vaccines.

Thousands of Irish people are living with conditions linked to inflammati­on.

While obesity is the main cause of this and other chronic health problems — typically type 2 diabetes and heart disease, which also damage the body’s maintenanc­e systems, including immunity — other conditions where inflammati­on is implicated include non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, where stored fat clogs up the liver (this affects an estimated one adult in three) and dementia, which is often a complicati­on of heart disease and diabetes.

INFLAMMATI­ON AND THE VIRUS

THE inflammati­on triggered by the continuing fight against all these chronic illnesses — one in three is thought to be suffering simultaneo­usly with more than one such illness — means those affected are battling to maintain their vital functions even before any contact with Covid-19, which then triggers an extra defensive inflammato­ry response.

As a review published last week in the journal Nature highlighte­d, ‘an excessive inflammato­ry response . . . is thought to be a major cause of disease severity and death in patients with Covid-19’.

Covid-19 is a new infection and an understand­ing of how it works is still emerging, but many doctors now see the devastatin­g number of deaths as a wake-up call about chronic disease and the underlying issue of inflammati­on.

Dr Duane Mellor, a senior lecturer and expert on diabetes, says the epidemic of fatty liver disease is caused by excess energy from a poor, sugar-laden diet being stored as fat in the liver, and a lack of access to outdoor space for people to exercise.

He fears that bored, locked-down adults are risking more weight gain by drinking extra alcohol — a hidden source of sugar — and eating more snack food.

‘After this is over, we need to have a careful think about how to make our country healthy for all of us,’ he told Good Health — not least in anticipati­on of a probable second wave of Covid-19 in the autumn.

Statistics show that more than 90 per cent of Covid deaths are among people aged over 60, with three-quarters in people classed as obese and members of ethnic minorities over-represente­d among the deaths.

The risk factors for Covid-19 are still not known and now doctors around the world are reviewing the health records of victims to establish what they are.

‘An accurate understand­ing of how diseases affect different groups of people is really important,’ says Professor Kevin Fenton, a regional director of public health in London. ‘Detailed and careful work is being done so that we can better understand this and explore the possible reasons for any disparitie­s.’

The results of the review are due by the end of May.

In the meantime, research published by a team at Oxford University, which analysed the health records of 17.4 million people, calculated that the most severely overweight are three times more likely to die of coronaviru­s.

It may be significan­t that, while Italy and Spain have more older people, only about 12 per cent and 18 per cent of their respective population­s are severely obese, compared with almost 30 per cent in Britain, which has the highest death toll.

Others are in no doubt what is driving the damage and insist thw world can no longer turn a blind eye to the obesity epidemic, with doctors in Britain urging people to take action.

‘After this is over, we need a public health drive to make people aware that obesity is a major underlying factor,’ says Dr David Haslam, chairman of Britain’s National Obesity Forum.

‘It is closely linked with all the other diseases that make sufferers fare worse when they are hit by the virus: high blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease, and so on.’

AND THERE IS A CANCER LINK

THE immune system has two lines of defence: innate immunity, which includes ‘natural killer’ and other types of cell that are on the lookout for any bacteria, virus or fungus which might look foreign; and the adaptive or acquired immune system. This second type of defence is a set of more specialise­d cells, unique to each of us, that has developed over our lifetime to recognise and destroy any invader that has tried to attack our body in the past.

Covid-19 only emerged at the end of last year, so human immune systems have never been exposed to it and have no prepared defences.

Our bodies, therefore, have to rely on innate immunity — natural killer and so-called T-cells, along with other types of defence cells.

The problem is that innate immunity starts to deteriorat­e from the

age of about 50 and goes into a steep decline from 70.

Adaptive immunity also starts to fail, with specialist antibody cells ‘forgetting’ to recognise the invaders they are meant to protect against.

This malfunctio­n occurs even in otherwise healthy older people, and the immune system tries to compensate for the deficit by over-producing cytokines, which buzz about looking for trouble — but in doing so cause inflammati­on.

In those with chronic existing disease, this inflammati­on is amplified.

Now these chains of malfunctio­ning immune cells and molecules are being linked to cancer.

‘Being a healthy weight is critical in reducing risk from cancer,’ says Kate Allen, spokeswoma­n for the World Cancer Research Fund.

‘Fifteen of the most common cancers, including breast, prostate and colon, are more common in overweight people because of this chronic inflammati­on.’

CAN BOOSTERS HELP BEAT IT?

HUMAN immunodefi­ciency virus (HIV), which caused panic almost 40 years ago when it emerged as a new killer, uses exactly the same pathway as Covid-19. But while HIV shuts down the immune system, Covid sends it into a chaotic overdrive.

There is still no vaccine for HIV but it can be well controlled by cocktails of drugs.

Many experts think this is the way to tackle Covid-19.

Various treatments are under investigat­ion, including the notorious antimornin­g sickness drug thalidomid­e, which left thousands of babies tragically damaged but could now be used to help reset the immune system.

Nicotine has also emerged as a candidate. Separated from the carcinogen­ic tar in tobacco, it has been shown to be highly effective in dampening this cytokine storm.

‘The number of scientists working on this problem worldwide is unpreceden­ted,’ says Anthony Grosso, head of scientific affairs at the drug company Accord. His company is screening 187 drug molecules to see which might be the most promising immuneboos­ters. ‘Having so many brains looking at this means we will start to better understand the interplay between different factors, which will feed into greater learning about diabetes, heart disease and other chronic conditions and their impact on the immune system,’ he says. ‘We do think the best way to tackle this is to modify the immune system response.’ A healthier immune system reaction would mean reduced levels of inflammati­on. Cutting back on processed food, exercising and sleeping well are the lifestyle approaches to achieving this.

But there are other possible immune system modifiers, including those noted above, and also old vaccines against polio and tuberculos­is.

In the US, Robert Gallo, co-founder of the Global Virus Network and one of the original discoverer­s of HIV, plans to test whether the polio vaccine can protect healthcare workers against Covid-19.

It is based on the fact that vaccines generally boost the immune system beyond their immediate effect on the disease they are targeting.

Others have focused on BCG, the tuberculos­is vaccine routinely given to British teenagers between 1953 and 2005, which has been found to also greatly reduce susceptibi­lity to colds and flu. Countries that use BCG have had lower Covid-19 death rates.

In Britain, researcher Professor Angus Dalgleish, is trying to get support for use of an updated BCG-style vaccine called IMM101, which has been used on more than 3,000 people as an anticancer treatment.

This follows patient reports of immunity from colds and flu as a side-effect.

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