1. Characteristics and outcomes of over 300,000 patients with COVID-19 and history of cancer in the United States and Spain
- Author
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Lana Yin Hui Lai, Daniel R. Morales, Talita Duarte-Salles, Thomas Falconer, Carlos Areia, Jitendra Jonnagaddala, Kristin Kostka, Christian G. Reich, Daniel Prieto-Alhambra, Lisa M. Schilling, Dalia Dawoud, Clair Blacketer, Marc A. Suchard, Isabelle Soerjomataram, Frank J. DeFalco, George Hripcsak, Osaid Alser, Jose D. Posada, Fredrik Nyberg, Laura Hester, William Carter, Lin Zhang, Michael E. Matheny, Sergio Fernandez-Bertolin, Ying Zhang, Waheed Ul Rahman Ahmed, María Aragón, Heba Alghoul, Karthik Natarajan, Asieh Golozar, Mengchun Gong, Martina Recalde, Patrick B. Ryan, Aedín C. Culhane, Andrea Pistillo, Vignesh Subbian, Kristine E. Lynch, Thamir M. Alshammari, Albert Prats-Uribe, Yang Shen, Donna R. Rivera, Diana Puente, Anthony G. Sena, Hokyun Jeon, Karishma Shah, Elena Roel, Nigam H. Shah, Eng Hooi Tan, Paula Casajust, Scott L. DuVall, Matthew Spotniz, Anna Ostropolets, Annalisa Trama, and Medical Informatics
- Subjects
Male ,Databases, Factual ,Outcome Assessment ,Epidemiology ,Comorbidity ,outcomes ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Cohort Studies ,Risk Factors ,Neoplasms ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Prevalence ,80 and over ,Medicine ,Young adult ,Aetiology ,Child ,Cancer ,Aged, 80 and over ,cohort ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Hospitalization ,Infectious Diseases ,Cohort ,oncology ,Female ,Patient Safety ,Cohort study ,Human ,Adult ,Urologic Diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Databases ,Young Adult ,Rare Diseases ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Clinical Research ,Internal medicine ,Influenza, Human ,Breast Cancer ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,Pandemics ,Factual ,Aged ,Immunosuppression Therapy ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Prevention ,COVID-19 ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Influenza ,Health Care ,Good Health and Well Being ,El Niño ,Spain ,Observational study ,business ,2.4 Surveillance and distribution - Abstract
Background: We described the demographics, cancer subtypes, comorbidities, and outcomes of patients with a history of cancer and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Second, we compared patients hospitalized with COVID-19 to patients diagnosed with COVID-19 and patients hospitalized with influenza. Methods: We conducted a cohort study using eight routinely collected health care databases from Spain and the United States, standardized to the Observational Medical Outcome Partnership common data model. Three cohorts of patients with a history of cancer were included: (i) diagnosed with COVID-19, (ii) hospitalized with COVID-19, and (iii) hospitalized with influenza in 2017 to 2018. Patients were followed from index date to 30 days or death. We reported demographics, cancer subtypes, comorbidities, and 30-day outcomes. Results: We included 366,050 and 119,597 patients diagnosed and hospitalized with COVID-19, respectively. Prostate and breast cancers were the most frequent cancers (range: 5%–18% and 1%–14% in the diagnosed cohort, respectively). Hematologic malignancies were also frequent, with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma being among the five most common cancer subtypes in the diagnosed cohort. Overall, patients were aged above 65 years and had multiple comorbidities. Occurrence of death ranged from 2% to 14% and from 6% to 26% in the diagnosed and hospitalized COVID-19 cohorts, respectively. Patients hospitalized with influenza (n = 67,743) had a similar distribution of cancer subtypes, sex, age, and comorbidities but lower occurrence of adverse events. Conclusions: Patients with a history of cancer and COVID-19 had multiple comorbidities and a high occurrence of COVID-19-related events. Hematologic malignancies were frequent. Impact: This study provides epidemiologic characteristics that can inform clinical care and etiologic studies.
- Published
- 2021