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Symptomatic, clinical and biomarker associations for mortality in hospitalized COVID-19 patients enriched for African Americans

Authors :
Hassan Ashktorab
Antonio Pizuorno
Folake Adeleye
Adeyinka Laiyemo
Maryam Mehdipour Dalivand
Farshad Aduli
Zaki A. Sherif
Gholamreza Oskrochi
Kibreab Angesom
Philip Oppong-Twene
Suryanarayana Reddy Challa
Nnaemeka Okorie
Esther S. Moon
Edward Romos
Boubini Jones-Wonni
Abdoul Madjid Kone
Sheldon Rankine
Camelita Thrift
Derek Scholes
Chiamaka Ekwunazu
Abigail Banson
Brianna Mitchell
Guttu Maskalo
Jillian Ross
Julencia Curtis
Rachel Kim
Chandler Gilliard
Geetha Ahuja
Joseph Mathew
Warren Gavin
Areeba Kara
Manuel Hache-Marliere
Leonidas Palaiodimos
Vishnu R. Mani
Aleksandr Kalabin
Vijay Reddy Gayam
Pavani Reddy Garlapati
Joseph Miller
Lakshmi Gayathri Chirumamilla
Fatimah Jackson
John M. Carethers
Farin Kamangar
Hassan Brim
Source :
BMC Infectious Diseases, Vol 22, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMC, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Background and Aims Initial reports on US COVID-19 showed different outcomes in different races. In this study we use a diverse large cohort of hospitalized COVID-19 patients to determine predictors of mortality. Methods We analyzed data from hospitalized COVID-19 patients (n = 5852) between March 2020- August 2020 from 8 hospitals across the US. Demographics, comorbidities, symptoms and laboratory data were collected. Results The cohort contained 3,662 (61.7%) African Americans (AA), 286 (5%) American Latinx (LAT), 1,407 (23.9%), European Americans (EA), and 93 (1.5%) American Asians (AS). Survivors and non-survivors mean ages in years were 58 and 68 for AA, 58 and 77 for EA, 44 and 61 for LAT, and 51 and 63 for AS. Mortality rates for AA, LAT, EA and AS were 14.8, 7.3, 16.3 and 2.2%. Mortality increased among patients with the following characteristics: age, male gender, New York region, cardiac disease, COPD, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, history of cancer, immunosuppression, elevated lymphocytes, CRP, ferritin, D-Dimer, creatinine, troponin, and procalcitonin. Use of mechanical ventilation (p = 0.001), shortness of breath (SOB) (p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712334
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMC Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.66e7e77ef7cf433e80187ea3a96c040b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-022-07520-1