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Factors associated with mortality among moderate and severe patients with COVID-19 in India: a secondary analysis of a randomised controlled trial

Authors :
Ashish Sharma
Anand Zachariah
Pankaj Malhotra
Ashish Jain
Priscilla Rupali
Gajanan Sapkal
Aparna Mukherjee
Vivek Kumar
Lakshmanan Jeyaseelan
Neha Singh
John Victor Peter
Anup Agarwal
Gunjan Kumar
Pranab Chatterjee
Tarun Bhatnagar
B Latha
Sunita Bundas
Ravi Dosi
Rosemarie de Souza
Simmi Dube
B Thrilok Chander
Shalini Bahadur
Amit Suri
Aikaj Jindal
Om Shrivastav
Vijay Barge
Archana Bajpayee
Muralidhar Tambe
Nimisha Sharma
Shreepad Bhat
Anil Gurtoo
D Himanshu Reddy
Kamlesh Upadhyay
Tinkal C Patel
Irfan Nagori
Pramod R Jha
C Aparna
Sunil Jodharam Panjwani
Milind Baldi
M Natarajan
Vrushali Khirid Khadke
Seema Dua
Joy John Mammen
Snehil Kumar
Dolly Daniel
Ravindraa Singh
Jayashree Sharma
Yojana A Gokhale
V Saravana Kumar
Himanshu Kaushal
Lovely Thomas
Jess Elizabeth Rasalam
Binila Chacko
Thenmozhi Mani
Melvin Joy
Malathi Murugesan
Janakkumar R Khambholja
Ram S Kaulgud
K V Sreedhar Babu
Pragya D Yadav
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 11, Iss 10 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

Objective Large data on the clinical characteristics and outcome of COVID-19 in the Indian population are scarce. We analysed the factors associated with mortality in a cohort of moderately and severely ill patients with COVID-19 enrolled in a randomised trial on convalescent plasma.Design Secondary analysis of data from a Phase II, Open Label, Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess the Safety and Efficacy of Convalescent Plasma to Limit COVID-19 Associated Complications in Moderate Disease.Setting 39 public and private hospitals across India during the study period from 22 April to 14 July 2020.Participants Of the 464 patients recruited, two were lost to follow-up, nine withdrew consent and two patients did not receive the intervention after randomisation. The cohort of 451 participants with known outcome at 28 days was analysed.Primary outcome measure Factors associated with all-cause mortality at 28 days after enrolment.Results The mean (SD) age was 51±12.4 years; 76.7% were males. Admission Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score was 2.4±1.1. Non-invasive ventilation, invasive ventilation and vasopressor therapy were required in 98.9%, 8.4% and 4.0%, respectively. The 28-day mortality was 14.4%. Median time from symptom onset to hospital admission was similar in survivors (4 days; IQR 3–7) and non-survivors (4 days; IQR 3–6). Patients with two or more comorbidities had 2.25 (95% CI 1.18 to 4.29, p=0.014) times risk of death. When compared with survivors, admission interleukin-6 levels were higher (p10 (9.97, 3.65–27.13, p1.0 mg/L (2.50, 1.14–5.48, p=0.022), ferritin ≥500 ng/mL (2.67, 1.44–4.96, p=0.002) and lactate dehydrogenase ≥450 IU/L (2.96, 1.60–5.45, p=0.001) were significantly associated with death.Conclusion In this cohort of moderately and severely ill patients with COVID-19, severity of illness, underlying comorbidities and elevated levels of inflammatory markers were significantly associated with death.Trial registration number CTRI/2020/04/024775.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
11
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8e0759af7ef47c5a4aea1bb853db1c8
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-050571