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Baseline phenotype and 30-day outcomes of people tested for COVID-19: an international network cohort including >3.32 million people tested with real-time PCR and >219,000 tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 in South Korea, Spain and the United States

Authors :
Jason Thomas
Kristin Kostka
Carlos Areia
Paula Casajust
Andrew E. Williams
Mengchun Gong
Anna Ostropolets
George Hripcsak
Scott L. DuVall
Marc A. Suchard
Peter R. Rijnbeek
Jennifer C E Lane
Martina Recalde
Daniel R. Morales
Jose D. Posada
Adam B. Wilcox
Maria Tereza Fernandes Abrahão
Osaid Alser
Clair Blacketer
Fredrik Nyberg
Ying Zhang
Anthony G. Sena
Christian G. Reich
Sergio Fernandez-Bertolin
Patrick B. Ryan
Lin Zhang
Jitendra Jonnagaddala
Thomas Falconer
Seng Chan You
David Vizcaya
Frank J. DeFalco
Vignesh Subbian
Michael E. Matheny
Karthik Natarajan
Waheed-Ul-Rahman Ahmed
Asieh Golozar
Thamir M. Alshammari
Hamed Abedtash
Heba Alghoul
Lana Yh Lai
Matthew E. Spotnitz
Elena Roel
Alan Andryc
Nigam H. Shah
Vojtech Huser
Kristine E. Lynch
Karishma Shah
Yin Guan
Stephen Fortin
Talita Duarte-Salles
Daniel Prieto-Alhambra
Lisa M. Schilling
Albert Prats-Uribe
Source :
medRxiv
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Zenodo, 2020.

Abstract

Early identification of symptoms and comorbidities most predictive of COVID-19 is critical to identify infection, guide policies to effectively contain the pandemic, and improve health systems’ response. Here, we characterised socio-demographics and comorbidity in 3,316,107persons tested and 219,072 persons tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 since January 2020, and their key health outcomes in the month following the first positive test. Routine care data from primary care electronic health records (EHR) from Spain, hospital EHR from the United States (US), and claims data from South Korea and the US were used. The majority of study participants were women aged 18-65 years old. Positive/tested ratio varied greatly geographically (2.2:100 to 31.2:100) and over time (from 50:100 in February-April to 6.8:100 in May-June). Fever, cough and dyspnoea were the most common symptoms at presentation. Between 4%-38% required admission and 1-10.5% died within a month from their first positive test. Observed disparity in testing practices led to variable baseline characteristics and outcomes, both nationally (US) and internationally. Our findings highlight the importance of large scale characterization of COVID-19 international cohorts to inform planning and resource allocation including testing as countries face a second wave.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
medRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bf23ce20f05a189682ab7386b0a03126