City
Epaper

Novel biomarker linked to hair loss can determine COVID severity in men

By ANI | Updated: May 6, 2021 23:30 IST

Researchers during a recent study discovered a novel biomarker to identify male patients with COVID-19, who are at the highest risk for ICU admission.

Open in App

Researchers during a recent study discovered a novel biomarker to identify male patients with COVID-19, who are at the highest risk for ICU admission.

The findings presented at EADV's 2021 Spring Symposium, suggested that men with genetic characteristics (phenotypes) sensitive to the male sex hormone androgen, are more likely to experience severe COVID-19 disease.

Researchers were driven to study the association between the androgen receptor (AR) gene and COVID-19, after observing the disproportionate number of men hospitalised with COVID-19 presenting with androgenetic alopecia (a common form of hair-loss) compared to the expected number in a similar age-matched population (79 per cent vs. 31-53 per cent).

Androgenetic alopecia is known to be controlled by variations in the AR gene, which affects how sensitive the body is to androgens (hormones such as testosterone). In addition, an enzyme implicated in COVID-19 infection (TMPRSS2) is regulated by an androgen response element - meaning that it too may be affected by variations in the AR gene.

As the polyglutamine repeat (CAG repeat) region located in the AR gene is associated with both androgen sensitivity and androgenetic alopecia, this research sought to identify the connection between CAG repeat region length and predisposition to increased COVID disease severity.

A prospective study of 65 hospitalised COVID-19 positive men measured the AR CAG repeat length of each man. Researchers found that male COVID patients with a CAG repeat below 22 nucleotides (CAG22) were significantly less likely to be admitted into ICU than patients with a CAG count over or equal to 22 nucleotides (CAG22; p=0.05).

Dr. Andy Goren, Chief Medical Officer, Applied Biology, Inc., Irvine, California, USA, explains: "Our data show that longer AR CAG scores are associated with more severe COVID 19 disease and indicate that AR CAG repeat length could be used as a biomarker to help identify male COVID 19 patients most at risk for ICU admissions."

"The identification of a biomarker connected with the androgen receptor is another piece of evidence highlighting the important role of androgens in COVID-19 disease severity," he adds.

Further research conducted by Dr Andy Goren and his team, reported at the EADV Spring Symposium, explores a promising new therapy for COVID-19 using a novel androgen receptor antagonist to regulate TMPRSS2 expression and possibly treat COVID-19 patients. The results of this study were submitted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal.

"This research demonstrates the scientific value of dermatology by offering key insights into the role of genetics and its link to COVID disease. It is an excellent example of some of the pioneering abstracts being showcased at The EADV Spring Symposium this year," says Prof. Lidia Rudnicka, EADV Board Member and Professor at the Medical University of Warsaw.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: EADV 2020Applied biology, inc.Andy gorenLidia rudnickausaIrvine
Open in App

Related Stories

LifestyleSeek Guidance from Best Astrologer in USA Acharya Indravarman

InternationalTrump Tariff Impact: Americans Rush to Stock Up Goods as US President’s Reciprocal Policy Looms

InternationalUSA: 27-year-old Social Media Influencer Arrested for Having Sex With Pet Dog And Posting it Online

Social ViralMan Drinks Almost Seven Litres of Liquid Eggs in 60 Seconds, Sets Guinness World Record (Watch Video)

InternationalNSA Under Scrutiny After Leaked Sex Chats Expose Inappropriate Conversations on Kink and Gender Surgery

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIndia sees robust 10.35 pc annual growth in domestic airline passengers in FY25

TechnologyIDFC FIRST Bank posts nearly 60 pc net profit loss at Rs 295.6 crore in Q4 FY25

TechnologyScreening for both active and dormant TB infection key to improve detection: Study

TechnologyMinister Ashish Sood outlines plan to make Delhi a 'credible medical destination'

TechnologyComponent PLI a key milestone in India's electronics manufacturing ecosystem: Industry