Low Weight Linked to Severe Pediatric COVID - Summary - MDSpire

Low Weight Linked to Severe Pediatric COVID

  • By

  • Andrea Surnit

  • June 30, 2026

  • 4 min

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Objective:

To investigate the association between nutritional status and clinical outcomes in pediatric patients with COVID-19 admitted to intensive care units.

Approach:
  • Study Design: Observational, multicenter study analyzing 432 patients aged 1 month to 18 years admitted to 36 pediatric intensive care units in Brazil.
  • Nutritional Assessment: Nutritional status was assessed using WHO growth criteria based on body mass index-for-age, weight-for-age, and stature-for-age z scores.
  • Statistical Analysis: Unadjusted and adjusted analyses using Poisson regression to evaluate the association between underweight status and clinical outcomes.
Key Findings:
  • Underweight patients had a higher risk of invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) by 83%, prolonged hospitalization by 47%, and more than twice the risk of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) compared to normal weight patients.
  • Mortality risk was higher in underweight patients with a relative risk of 8.20, although the estimate was imprecise due to a low number of deaths.
  • No independent association was found between overweight status and adverse outcomes.
Interpretation:

Nutritional status was a significant predictor of clinical severity in critically ill pediatric patients with COVID-19, according to the study authors.

Limitations:
  • Measurement bias due to inconsistent recording across hospitals.
  • Retrospective collection of anthropometric data from medical records.
  • Reliance on BMI-for-age and weight-for-age rather than direct body composition measures.
  • Wide confidence intervals around mortality estimates due to low death count.
  • Regional socioeconomic disparities may limit generalizability.
Conclusion:

The findings highlight the importance of incorporating nutritional assessment, prevention, and management as part of standard care for pediatric patients with COVID-19, as stated by the study authors.

Sources:

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