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'Vaccination saves lives: a real-time study of patients with chronic diseases and severe COVID-19 infection'

Authors :
Aparna, Mukherjee
Gunjan, Kumar
Alka, Turuk
Ashish, Bhalla
Thrilok Chander, Bingi
Pankaj, Bhardwaj
Tridip Dutta, Baruah
Subhasis, Mukherjee
Arunansu, Talukdar
Yogiraj, Ray
Mary, John
Janakkumar R, Khambholja
Amit H, Patel
Sourin, Bhuniya
Rajnish, Joshi
Geetha R, Menon
Damodar, Sahu
Vishnu Vardhan, Rao
Balram, Bhargava
Samiran, Panda
Avijit, Hazra
Source :
QJM : monthly journal of the Association of Physicians.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

ObjectivesThis study aims to describe the demographic and clinical profile and ascertain the determinants of outcome among hospitalized coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) adult patients enrolled in the National Clinical Registry for COVID-19 (NCRC).MethodsNCRC is an on-going data collection platform operational in 42 hospitals across India. Data of hospitalized COVID-19 patients enrolled in NCRC between 1st September 2020 to 26th October 2021 were examined.ResultsAnalysis of 29 509 hospitalized, adult COVID-19 patients [mean (SD) age: 51.1 (16.2) year; male: 18 752 (63.6%)] showed that 15 678 (53.1%) had at least one comorbidity. Among 25 715 (87.1%) symptomatic patients, fever was the commonest symptom (72.3%) followed by shortness of breath (48.9%) and dry cough (45.5%). In-hospital mortality was 14.5% (n = 3957). Adjusted odds of dying were significantly higher in age group ≥60 years, males, with diabetes, chronic kidney diseases, chronic liver disease, malignancy and tuberculosis, presenting with dyspnoea and neurological symptoms. WHO ordinal scale 4 or above at admission carried the highest odds of dying [5.6 (95% CI: 4.6–7.0)]. Patients receiving one [OR: 0.5 (95% CI: 0.4–0.7)] or two doses of anti-SARS CoV-2 vaccine [OR: 0.4 (95% CI: 0.3–0.7)] were protected from in-hospital mortality.ConclusionsWHO ordinal scale at admission is the most important independent predictor for in-hospital death in COVID-19 patients. Anti-SARS-CoV2 vaccination provides significant protection against mortality.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine

Details

ISSN :
14602393
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
QJM : monthly journal of the Association of Physicians
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ce6fd50d1aa65b383b7e0553189a498a