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Comorbidities for fatal outcome among the COVID-19 patients: A hospital-based case-control study

Authors :
Wan-Li Jiang
Qing-Bin Lu
Hao-Long Zeng
Rui Li
Hao Li
Li-Qun Fang
Huijun Li
Xiao-Ai Zhang
Guo-Liang Yang
Leike Zhang
Juan Du
Xin Zhang
Wei Liu
Source :
Journal of Infection, The Journal of Infection
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Highlights • This study provides a risk score that predicts critical care admission and death in COVID-19. • Chest radiography severity scores are highly predictive of outcome. • The findings may inform admit/discharge decisions as well as patient selection for clinical trials.<br />Background The COVID-19 pandemic continues to escalate. There is urgent need to stratify patients. Understanding risk of deterioration will assist in admission and discharge decisions, and help selection for clinical studies to indicate where risk of therapy-related complications is justified. Methods An observational cohort of patients acutely admitted to two London hospitals with COVID-19 and positive SARS-CoV-2 swab results was assessed. Demographic details, clinical data, comorbidities, blood parameters and chest radiograph severity scores were collected from electronic health records. Endpoints assessed were critical care admission and death. A risk score was developed to predict outcomes. Findings Analyses included 1,157 patients. Older age, male sex, comorbidities, respiratory rate, oxygenation, radiographic severity, higher neutrophils, higher CRP and lower albumin at presentation predicted critical care admission and mortality. Non-white ethnicity predicted critical care admission but not death. Social deprivation was not predictive of outcome. A risk score was developed incorporating twelve characteristics: age>40, male, non-white ethnicity, oxygen saturations3, neutrophil count>8.0 x109/L, CRP>40 mg/L, albumin100 µmol/L, diabetes mellitus, hypertension and chronic lung disease. Risk scores of 4 or higher corresponded to a 28-day cumulative incidence of critical care admission or death of 40.7% (95% CI: 37.1 to 44.4), versus 12.4% (95% CI: 8.2 to 16.7) for scores less than 4. Interpretation Our study identified predictors of critical care admission and death in people admitted to hospital with COVID-19. These predictors were incorporated into a risk score that will inform clinical care and stratify patients for clinical trials.

Details

ISSN :
01634453
Volume :
82
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Infection
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4696804da725344c94e280af37969798