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Authorship Correction: International Changes in COVID-19 Clinical Trajectories Across 315 Hospitals and 6 Countries: Retrospective Cohort Study

Authors :
Weber, Griffin M
Zhang, Harrison G
L'Yi, Sehi
Bonzel, Clara-Lea
Hong, Chuan
Avillach, Paul
Gutiérrez-Sacristán, Alba
Palmer, Nathan P
Tan, Amelia Li Min
Wang, Xuan
Yuan, William
Gehlenborg, Nils
Alloni, Anna
Amendola, Danilo F
Bellasi, Antonio
Bellazzi, Riccardo
Beraghi, Michele
Bucalo, Mauro
Chiovato, Luca
Cho, Kelly
Dagliati, Arianna
Estiri, Hossein
Follett, Robert W
García Barrio, Noelia
Hanauer, David A
Henderson, Darren W
Ho, Yuk-Lam
Holmes, John H
Hutch, Meghan R
Kavuluru, Ramakanth
Kirchoff, Katie
Klann, Jeffrey G
Krishnamurthy, Ashok K
Le, Trang T
Liu, Molei
Loh, Ne Hooi Will
Lozano-Zahonero, Sara
Luo, Yuan
Maidlow, Sarah
Makoudjou, Adeline
Malovini, Alberto
Martins, Marcelo Roberto
Moal, Bertrand
Morris, Michele
Mowery, Danielle L
Murphy, Shawn N
Neuraz, Antoine
Ngiam, Kee Yuan
Okoshi, Marina P
Omenn, Gilbert S
Patel, Lav P
Pedrera Jiménez, Miguel
Prudente, Robson A
Samayamuthu, Malarkodi Jebathilagam
Sanz Vidorreta, Fernando J
Schriver, Emily R
Schubert, Petra
Serrano Balazote, Pablo
Tan, Byorn WL
Tanni, Suzana E
Tibollo, Valentina
Visweswaran, Shyam
Wagholikar, Kavishwar B
Xia, Zongqi
Zöller, Daniela
Kohane, Isaac S
Cai, Tianxi
South, Andrew M
Brat, Gabriel A
Source :
Journal of Medical Internet Research
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
JMIR Publications, 2021.

Abstract

Many countries have experienced 2 predominant waves of COVID-19-related hospitalizations. Comparing the clinical trajectories of patients hospitalized in separate waves of the pandemic enables further understanding of the evolving epidemiology, pathophysiology, and health care dynamics of the COVID-19 pandemic.In this retrospective cohort study, we analyzed electronic health record (EHR) data from patients with SARS-CoV-2 infections hospitalized in participating health care systems representing 315 hospitals across 6 countries. We compared hospitalization rates, severe COVID-19 risk, and mean laboratory values between patients hospitalized during the first and second waves of the pandemic.Using a federated approach, each participating health care system extracted patient-level clinical data on their first and second wave cohorts and submitted aggregated data to the central site. Data quality control steps were adopted at the central site to correct for implausible values and harmonize units. Statistical analyses were performed by computing individual health care system effect sizes and synthesizing these using random effect meta-analyses to account for heterogeneity. We focused the laboratory analysis on C-reactive protein (CRP), ferritin, fibrinogen, procalcitonin, D-dimer, and creatinine based on their reported associations with severe COVID-19.Data were available for 79,613 patients, of which 32,467 were hospitalized in the first wave and 47,146 in the second wave. The prevalence of male patients and patients aged 50 to 69 years decreased significantly between the first and second waves. Patients hospitalized in the second wave had a 9.9% reduction in the risk of severe COVID-19 compared to patients hospitalized in the first wave (95% CI 8.5%-11.3%). Demographic subgroup analyses indicated that patients aged 26 to 49 years and 50 to 69 years; male and female patients; and black patients had significantly lower risk for severe disease in the second wave than in the first wave. At admission, the mean values of CRP were significantly lower in the second wave than in the first wave. On the seventh hospital day, the mean values of CRP, ferritin, fibrinogen, and procalcitonin were significantly lower in the second wave than in the first wave. In general, countries exhibited variable changes in laboratory testing rates from the first to the second wave. At admission, there was a significantly higher testing rate for D-dimer in France, Germany, and Spain.Patients hospitalized in the second wave were at significantly lower risk for severe COVID-19. This corresponded to mean laboratory values in the second wave that were more likely to be in typical physiological ranges on the seventh hospital day compared to the first wave. Our federated approach demonstrated the feasibility and power of harmonizing heterogeneous EHR data from multiple international health care systems to rapidly conduct large-scale studies to characterize how COVID-19 clinical trajectories evolve.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14388871 and 14394456
Volume :
23
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Medical Internet Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d7884581f44a1051238bc32ae7e15681