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Healthcare disparities among anticoagulation therapies for severe COVID‐19 patients in the multi‐site VIRUS registry.

Authors :
Kirkup, Christian
Pawlowski, Colin
Puranik, Arjun
Conrad, Ian
O'Horo, John C.
Gomaa, Dina
Banner‐Goodspeed, Valerie M
Mosier, Jarrod M
Zabolotskikh, Igor Borisovich
Daugherty, Steven K.
Bernstein, Michael A.
Zaren, Howard A.
Bansal, Vikas
Pickering, Brian
Badley, Andrew D.
Kashyap, Rahul
Venkatakrishnan, A. J.
Soundararajan, Venky
Source :
Journal of Medical Virology; Jul2021, Vol. 93 Issue 7, p4303-4318, 16p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Here we analyze hospitalized andintensive care unit coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) patient outcomes from the international VIRUS registry (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04323787). We find that COVID‐19 patients administered unfractionated heparin but not enoxaparin have a higher mortality‐rate (390 of 1012 = 39%) compared to patients administered enoxaparin but not unfractionated heparin (270 of 1939 = 14%), presenting a risk ratio of 2.79 (95% confidence interval [CI]: [2.42, 3.16]; p = 4.45e−52). This difference persists even after balancing on a number of covariates including demographics, comorbidities, admission diagnoses, and method of oxygenation, with an increased mortality rate on discharge from the hospital of 37% (268 of 733) for unfractionated heparin versus 22% (154 of 711) for enoxaparin, presenting a risk ratio of 1.69 (95% CI: [1.42, 2.00]; p = 1.5e−8). In these balanced cohorts, a number of complications occurred at an elevated rate for patients administered unfractionated heparin compared to patients administered enoxaparin, including acute kidney injury, acute cardiac injury, septic shock, and anemia. Furthermore, a higher percentage of Black/African American COVID patients (414 of 1294 [32%]) were noted to receive unfractionated heparin compared to White/Caucasian COVID patients (671 of 2644 [25%]), risk ratio 1.26 (95% CI: [1.14, 1.40]; p = 7.5e−5). After balancing upon available clinical covariates, this difference in anticoagulant use remained statistically significant (311 of 1047 [30%] for Black/African American vs. 263 of 1047 [25%] for White/Caucasian, p =.02, risk ratio 1.18; 95% CI: [1.03, 1.36]). While retrospective studies cannot suggest any causality, these findings motivate the need for follow‐up prospective research into the observed racial disparity in anticoagulant use and outcomes for severe COVID‐19 patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01466615
Volume :
93
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Medical Virology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
150489374
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jmv.26918