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Changes in the rate of cardiometabolic and pulmonary events during the COVID-19 pandemic

Authors :
Stephen J. W. Evans
Laurie A. Tomlinson
Elizabeth A. Williamson
Chris Bates
John Tazare
Kevin Wing
Brian MacKenna
Frank Hester
Christopher T Rentsch
John Parry
Emily Nightingale
Alex J Walker
Harriet Forbes
Anna Schultze
Sebastian Bacon
Ben Goldacre
David M. Evans
Helen Mcdonald
Caroline Minassian
George Hickman
Ian J. Douglas
Rohini Mathur
Liam Smeeth
Amir Mehrkar
Rosalind M Eggo
William J Hulme
Krishnan Bhaskaran
Angel Y S Wong
Richard Croker
Caroline E Morton
Helen J Curtis
Peter Inglesby
Jonathan Cockburn
Sam Harper
Source :
medRxiv pre
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

BackgroundThere has been extensive speculation about the relationship between COVID-19 and various cardiometabolic and pulmonary conditions. This a complex question: COVID-19 may cause a cardiometabolic or respiratory event; admission for a clinical event may result in hospital-acquired SARS-CoV-2 infection; both may contribute to a patient surpassing the threshold for presenting to services; and the presence of a pandemic may change whether patients present to services at all. To inform analysis of these questions, we set out to describe the overall rate of various key clinical events over time, and their relationship with COVID-19.MethodsWorking on behalf of NHS England, we used data from the OpenSAFELY platform containing data from approximately 40% of the population of England. We selected the whole adult population of 17m patients and within this identified two further mutually exclusive groups: patients who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 in the community; and patients hospitalised with COVID-19. We report counts of death, DVT, PE, ischaemic stroke, MI, heart failure, AKI and diabetic ketoacidosis in each month between February 2019 and October 2020 within each of: the general population, community SARS-CoV-2 cases, and hospitalised patients with COVID-19. Outcome events were defined using hospitalisations, GP records and cause of death data.ResultsFor all outcomes except death there was a lower count of events in April 2020 compared to April 2019. For most outcomes the minimum count of events was in April 2020, where the decrease compared to April 2019 in events ranged from 5.9% (PE) to 40.0% (heart failure). Despite hospitalised COVID-19 patients making up just 0.14% of the population in April 2020, these patients accounted for an extremely high proportion of cardiometabolic and respiratory events in that month (range of proportions 10.3% (DVT) to 33.5% (AKI)).InterpretationWe observed a substantial drop in the incidence of cardiometabolic and pulmonary events in the non-COVID-19 general population, but high occurrence of COVID-19 among patients with these events. Shortcomings in routine NHS secondary care data, especially around the timing and order of events, make causal interpretations challenging. We caution that the intermediate findings reported here should be used to inform the design and interpretation of any studies using a general population comparator to evaluate the relationship between COVID-19 and other clinical events.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
medRxiv pre
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....747cb938958e308c51a94571c5f9ddb3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.02.17.21251812