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Gastrointestinal symptoms and complications in patients hospitalized due to COVID-19, an international multicentre prospective cohort study (TIVURON project)

Authors :
Karina Cárdenas-Jaén
Sergio A. Sánchez-Luna
Alicia Vaillo-Rocamora
Micaela Riat Castro-Zocchi
Laura Guberna-Blanco
Daniel Useros-Brañas
José M. Remes-Troche
Antonio Ramos-De la Medina
Bryan A. Priego-Parra
José A. Velarde-Ruiz Velasco
Pedro Martínez-Ayala
Álvaro Urzúa
Dannette Guiñez-Francois
Katarzyna M. Pawlak
Katarzyna Kozłowska-Petriczko
Irati Gorroño-Zamalloa
Clara Urteaga-Casares
Inmaculada Ortiz-Polo
Adolfo del Val Antoñana
Edgard E. Lozada-Hernández
Enrique Obregón-Moreno
Guillermo García-Rayado
María José Domper-Arnal
Diego Casas-Deza
Elena I. Esteban-Cabello
Luis A. Díaz
Arnoldo Riquelme
Helena Martínez-Lozano
Francisco Navarro-Romero
Ignasi Olivas
Guillem Iborra-Muñoz
Alicia Calero-Amaro
Ibán Caravaca-García
Francisco J. Lacueva-Gómez
Rubén Pastor-Mateu
Berta Lapeña-Muñoz
Violeta Sastre-Lozano
Nazaret M. Pizarro-Vega
Luigi Melcarne
Marc Pedrosa-Aragón
José J. Mira
Aurora Mula MStat
Irene Carrillo
Enrique de-Madaria
Source :
GASTROENTEROLOGIA Y HEPATOLOGIA, r-FISABIO. Repositorio Institucional de Producción Científica, instname
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

Retrospective studies suggest that coronavirus disease (COVID-19) commonly involves gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms and complications. Our aim was to prospectively evaluate GI manifestations in patients hospitalized for COVID-19.This international multicentre prospective cohort study recruited COVID-19 patients hospitalized at 31 centres in Spain, Mexico, Chile, and Poland, between May and September 2020. Patients were followed-up until 15 days post-discharge and completed comprehensive questionnaires assessing GI symptoms and complications. A descriptive analysis as well as a bivariate and multivariate analysis were performer using binary logistic regression. p0.05 was considered significant.Eight hundred twenty-nine patients were enrolled; 129 (15.6%) had severe COVID-19, 113 (13.7%) required ICU admission, and 43 (5.2%) died. Upon admission, the most prevalent GI symptoms were anorexia (n=413; 49.8%), diarrhoea (n=327; 39.4%), nausea/vomiting (n=227; 27.4%), and abdominal pain (n=172; 20.7%), which were mild/moderate throughout the disease and resolved during follow-up. One-third of patients exhibited liver injury. Non-severe COVID-19 was associated with ≥2 GI symptoms upon admission (OR 0.679; 95% CI 0.464-0.995; p=0.046) or diarrhoea during hospitalization (OR 0.531; 95% CI 0.328-0.860; p=0.009). Multivariate analysis revealed that worse hospital outcomes were not independently associated with liver injury or GI symptoms.GI symptoms were more common than previously documented, and were mild, rapidly resolved, and not independently associated with COVID-19 severity. Liver injury was a frequent complication in hospitalized patients not independently associated with COVID-19 severity.

Details

ISSN :
02105705
Volume :
46
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gastroenterología y Hepatología
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....820f271328d5f8895e13a0c24f08fdab
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gastrohep.2022.10.007