Could Lower Testosterone in Older Men Explain Higher COVID-19 Morbidity and Mortalities?
Round 1
Reviewer 1 Report
Review of "Testosterone in COVID-19, a novel approach". This review proposes that the rough correlation between severe morbidity and mortalities from COVID-19 (also SARS-CoV and MERS) observed in older men and the decline in testosterone levels might suggest a causal relationship. Since testosterone is known to play a role in calcium homeostasis and it is known that a number of viruses manipulate calcium levels intracellularly to their advantage, the authors suggest that dysregulation of cellular calcium due to lowered testosterone could lead to conditions that favor increased COVID-19 replication and cellular/organ damage. Also, since testosterone has an anti-inflammatory activity, lower testosterone levels may result in increased inflammatory tissue damage and more severe disease. The authors cite 3 references that report low testosterone levels in COVID-19 male patients with most cases a return to normal levels months after infection.
The authors (and other investigators) reasonably suggest that the correlation between low testosterone levels of elderly men and severity of COVID-19 symptoms is causal and require more research to investigate the mechanism(s). While there is some information about the role of calcium in COVID-19 infection in cells, more research is needed to understand how cellular regulation/dysregulation of calcium affects viral replication.
I like the review. The writing is clear. I am not in love with the title because it is too understated. One suggestion as a title- "Could lower testosterone in older men explain higher COVID-19 morbidity and mortalities?"
Author Response
REVIEWER 1
Review of "Testosterone in COVID-19, a novel approach". This review proposes that the rough correlation between severe morbidity and mortalities from COVID-19 (also SARS-CoV and MERS) observed in older men and the decline in testosterone levels might suggest a causal relationship. Since testosterone is known to play a role in calcium homeostasis and it is known that a number of viruses manipulate calcium levels intracellularly to their advantage, the authors suggest that dysregulation of cellular calcium due to lowered testosterone could lead to conditions that favor increased COVID-19 replication and cellular/organ damage. Also, since testosterone has an anti-inflammatory activity, lower testosterone levels may result in increased inflammatory tissue damage and more severe disease. The authors cite 3 references that report low testosterone levels in COVID-19 male patients with most cases a return to normal levels months after infection.
The authors (and other investigators) reasonably suggest that the correlation between low testosterone levels of elderly men and severity of COVID-19 symptoms is causal and require more research to investigate the mechanism(s). While there is some information about the role of calcium in COVID-19 infection in cells, more research is needed to understand how cellular regulation/dysregulation of calcium affects viral replication.
Q: I like the review. The writing is clear. I am not in love with the title because it is too understated. One suggestion as a title- "Could lower testosterone in older men explain higher COVID-19 morbidity and mortalities?"
A: Authors are grateful for the reviewers comment and changed the manuscripts title in accordance with the reviewer’s suggestion.
Author Response File: Author Response.docx
Reviewer 2 Report
This is a very interesting article.
regarding this paragraph i would suggest the authors also to specify that the numbers from lines 40-41 are continuously evolving.
Regarding lines 47-48 i would also mention the situation in other countries.
You can find some interesting informations also in this two articles:
DOI 10.2147/RMHP.S284557, DOI 10.3390/microorganisms8111704
Regarding the rest of the article i have no comments just in what concernes the conclusion i would restructure it more concise.
Author Response
REVIEWER 2
This is a very interesting article.
Q1: regarding this paragraph i would suggest the authors also to specify that the numbers from lines 40-41 are continuously evolving.
A: Some words were added in this regard to lines 40-41, updating the data corresponding to the current status and stating that these statistics are continuously being updated.
Q2: Regarding lines 47-48 i would also mention the situation in other countries.
A: Actualized numbers for America and USA were included. Corresponding references were added, and we updated the data corresponding to the current status.
Line number 52-56
According to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University, in January 2022, confirmed cases in America were 105,416, 916 and USA had the highest incidence [1]. Global Health 50/50 reports that in this country male patient be-tween 50 and 64 years of age presented a death toll almost two times higher than in women of the same age (293.26 vs 170.66 per 100,000, respectively) [3].
Q3: You can find some interesting informations also in this two articles: CITED
DOI 10.2147/RMHP.S284557, DOI 10.3390/microorganisms8111704
A: We thank the reviewer for the advice. Both references were consulted and cited in the text (Lines 42-44, and Lines 76-79, respectively)
Q3: Regarding the rest of the article i have no comments just in what concerns the conclusion i would restructure it more concise.
A: The Conclusions section was shortened.
Author Response File: Author Response.docx