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Risk factors of criticalmortal COVID-19 cases: A systematic literature review and meta-analysis

Authors :
Qingsong Li
Fang Peng
Jiahao Peng
Weiliang Tang
Huahua Liu
Zhaohai Zheng
Peng Zhang
Buyun Xu
Shuqing Liu
Jingjing Zhao
Hangyuan Guo
Chongfu Jiang
Chunji Ye
Yan Zhou
Yangbo Xing
Source :
Journal of Infection
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

An epidemic of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) began in December 2019 and triggered a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC). We aimed to find risk factors for the progression of COVID-19 to help reducing the risk of critical illness and death for clinical help.The data of COVID-19 patients until March 20, 2020 were retrieved from four databases. We statistically analyzed the risk factors of critical/mortal and non-critical COVID-19 patients with meta-analysis.Thirteen studies were included in Meta-analysis, including a total number of 3027 patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection. Male, older than 65, and smoking were risk factors for disease progression in patients with COVID-19 (male: OR = 1.76, 95% CI (1.41, 2.18), P0.00001; age over 65 years old: OR =6.06, 95% CI(3.98, 9.22), P0.00001; current smoking: OR =2.51, 95% CI(1.39, 3.32), P = 0.0006). The proportion of underlying diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and respiratory disease were statistically significant higher in critical/mortal patients compared to the non-critical patients (diabetes: OR=3.68, 95% CI (2.68, 5.03), P0.00001; hypertension: OR = 2.72, 95% CI (1.60,4.64), P = 0.0002; cardiovascular disease: OR = 5.19, 95% CI(3.25, 8.29), P0.00001; respiratory disease: OR = 5.15, 95% CI(2.51, 10.57), P0.00001). Clinical manifestations such as fever, shortness of breath or dyspnea were associated with the progression of disease [fever: 0R = 0.56, 95% CI (0.38, 0.82), P = 0.003;shortness of breath or dyspnea: 0R=4.16, 95% CI (3.13, 5.53), P0.00001]. Laboratory examination such as aspartate amino transferase(AST)40U/L, creatinine(Cr) ≥ 133mol/L, hypersensitive cardiac troponin I(hs-cTnI)28pg/mL, procalcitonin(PCT)0.5ng/mL, lactatede hydrogenase(LDH)245U/L, and D-dimer0.5mg/L predicted the deterioration of disease while white blood cells(WBC)4 × 10Male, aged over 65, smoking patients might face a greater risk of developing into the critical or mortal condition and the comorbidities such as hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and respiratory diseases could also greatly affect the prognosis of the COVID-19. Clinical manifestation such as fever, shortness of breath or dyspnea and laboratory examination such as WBC, AST, Cr, PCT, LDH, hs-cTnI and D-dimer could imply the progression of COVID-19.

Details

ISSN :
15322742
Volume :
81
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of infection
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....165510afebf3244190d2d5f44fd2ddc5