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. 2021 Jan 9;36(3):311–318. doi: 10.1007/s10654-020-00709-1

Table 4.

Sensitivity analysis for the association between serum IGF-1 concentrations and COVID-19 mortality with adjustment for waist circumference instead of body mass index

Quartile of log-transformed IGF-1 levels, OR (95% CI)a P-trendb OR per 1-SD incrementc Adjusted OR per 1-SD incrementd
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
No. of cases 142 105 100 68
Model 1 Ref 0.70 (0.50–0.97) 0.76 (0.55–1.07) 0.53 (0.37–0.77) 0.001 0.84 (0.74–0.95) 0.80 (0.68–0.94)
Model 2 Ref 0.74 (0.53–1.04) 0.86 (0.61–1.21) 0.59 (0.40–0.85) 0.01 0.88 (0.78–0.99) 0.85 (0.72–0.99)
Model 2 plus other factorse Ref 0.71 (0.49–1.03) 0.92 (0.64–1.33) 0.56 (0.37–0.84) 0.02 0.86 (0.74–0.98) 0.82 (0.68–0.98)

OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; Ref, reference

aModel 1: adjusted for age at infection, sex, ethnicity. Model 2: additionally adjusted for Townsend deprivation index, waist circumference, smoking status, alcohol drinking, physical activity, and prevalent diabetes

bP-trend was based on the median value of each quartile of log-transformed IGF-1 levels as a continuous variable in the models

cSD was the standard deviation of log-transformed IGF-1 levels, which was 0.30

dORs per SD increment were additionally corrected for the intraclass correlation coefficient (0.78) obtained from the subsample of participants with repeat IGF-1 measurements

eModel 2 plus additional adjustment for serum glucose, cardiovascular risk factors (serum lipids, blood pressure, cholesterol lowering and antihypertensive medications), and C-reactive protein. A total of 236 participants had missing data on serum glucose, lipids, or C-reactive protein