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Characteristics and outcomes of 118,155 COVID-19 individuals with a history of cancer in the United States and Spain

Authors :
Diana Puente Dr
Daniel R Morales Dr
Anthony G Sena Mr
Heba Alghoul Mr
Elena Roel Mrs
Donna Rivera Mrs
Nigam Shah Dr
Matthew Spotnitz Mr
Vignesh Subbian Dr
Jose D Posada Dr
Clair Blacketer Mrs
Andrea Pistillo Mr
Albert Prats-Uribe Mr
Lana Yh Lai Dr
Eng Hooi Tan Dr
Marc A Suchard Dr
Anna Ostropolets Mrs
Thamir M Alshammari Dr
Kristine E Lynch Dr
George Hripcsak Mr
Mengchun Gong Mr
Laura Hester Dr
Frank DeFalco Mr
Asieh Golozar Dr
Thomas Falconer Mr
Maria Aragon Mrs
Christian G Reich Dr
Hokyun Jeon Mr
Karishma Shah Mrs
Scott L Duvall Dr
Talita Duarte-Salles Dr
Lisa M Schilling Mrs
Lin Zhang Dr
Karthik Natarajan Dr
Martina Recalde Mrs
Michael E Matheny Mr
Carlos Areia Mr
Fredrik Nyberg Dr
Daniel Prieto-Alhambra Dr
Annalisa Trama Dr
Patrick Ryan Dr
Kristin Kostka Mrs
William Carter Mr
Waheed-Ul-Rahman Ahmed Mr
Isabelle Soerjomataram Dr
Aedin C Culhane Dr
Yang Shen Mr
Osaid Alser Mr
Dalia Dawoud Dr
Ying Zhang Dr
Sergio Fernandez-Bertolin Mr
Jitendra Jonnagaddala Dr
Paula Casajust Mrs
Source :
medRxiv

Abstract

PurposeWe aimed to describe the demographics, cancer subtypes, comorbidities and outcomes of patients with a history of cancer with COVID-19 from March to June 2020. Secondly, we compared patients hospitalized with COVID-19 to patients diagnosed with COVID-19 and patients hospitalized with influenza.MethodsWe conducted a cohort study using eight routinely-collected healthcare databases from Spain and the US, 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 2017-2018. Patients were followed from index date to 30 days or death. We reported demographics, cancer subtypes, comorbidities, and 30-day outcomes.ResultsWe included 118,155 patients with a cancer history in the COVID-19 diagnosed and 41,939 in the COVID-19 hospitalized cohorts. The most frequent cancer subtypes were prostate and breast cancer (range: 5-19% and 1-14% in the diagnosed cohort, respectively). Hematological malignancies were also frequent, with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma being among the 5 most common cancer subtypes in the diagnosed cohort. Overall, patients were more frequently aged above 65 years and had multiple comorbidities. Occurrence of death ranged from 8% to 14% and from 18% to 26% in the diagnosed and hospitalized COVID-19 cohorts, respectively. Patients hospitalized with influenza (n=242,960) had a similar distribution of cancer subtypes, sex, age and comorbidities but lower occurrence of adverse events.ConclusionPatients with a history of cancer and COVID-19 have advanced age, multiple comorbidities, and a high occurence of COVID-19-related events. Additionaly, hematological malignancies were frequent in these patients.This observational study provides epidemiologic characteristics that can inform clinical care and future etiological studies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
medRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....481dc2989232e7b92100c616aa8c8398
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.01.12.21249672