Back to Search Start Over

Influence of sex on development of thrombosis in patients with COVID-19: From the CLOT-COVID study

Authors :
Yugo Yamashita
Sen Yachi
Makoto Takeyama
Yuji Nishimoto
Ichizo Tsujino
Junichi Nakamura
Naoto Yamamoto
Hiroko Nakata
Satoshi Ikeda
Michihisa Umetsu
Shizu Aikawa
Hiroya Hayashi
Hirono Satokawa
Yoshinori Okuno
Eriko Iwata
Yoshito Ogihara
Nobutaka Ikeda
Akane Kondo
Takehisa Iwai
Norikazu Yamada
Tomohiro Ogawa
Takao Kobayashi
Makoto Mo
Source :
Thrombosis research. 213
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

There has been limited data on the influence of sex on development of thrombosis in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).The CLOT-COVID Study was a retrospective, multicenter cohort study enrolling 2894 consecutive hospitalized patients with COVID-19 among 16 centers in Japan from April 2021 to September 2021. We divided the entire cohort into the men (N = 1885) and women (N = 1009) groups.There were no significant differences in D-dimer levels at admission between men and women. Men had more severe status of the COVID-19 at admission compared with women (Mild: 57% versus 66%, Moderate: 34% versus 29%, and Severe: 9.1% versus 5.7%, P 0.001). Men more often received pharmacological thromboprophylaxis than women (47% versus 35%, P 0.001). During the hospitalization, men more often developed thrombosis than women (2.5% [95%CI, 1.9-3.3%] versus 0.8% [95%CI, 0.4-1.6%], P = 0.001). Men had numerically higher incidences of thrombosis than women in all subgroups of the worst severity of COVID-19 during the hospitalization (Mild: 0.3% versus 0.0%, Moderate: 1.6% versus 1.0%, and Severe: 11.1% versus 4.3%). Even after adjusting confounders in the multivariable logistic regression model, the excess risk of men relative to women remained significant for thrombosis (adjusted OR, 2.51; 95%CI, 1.16-5.43, P = 0.02).In the current large observational study of patients with COVID-19, men had more severe status of the COVID-19 than women, and the risk of development of thrombosis was higher in men compared with women, which could be helpful in determining the patient-specific optimal management strategies for COVID-19.

Details

ISSN :
18792472
Volume :
213
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Thrombosis research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4fd0fea4dd47141af4bd7885b926b5f8