Cargando…

A case-control and cohort study to determine the relationship between ethnic background and severe COVID-19

BACKGROUND: People of minority ethnic backgrounds may be disproportionately affected by severe COVID-19. Whether this relates to increased infection risk, more severe disease progression, or worse in-hospital survival is unknown. The contribution of comorbidities or socioeconomic deprivation to ethn...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zakeri, Rosita, Bendayan, Rebecca, Ashworth, Mark, Bean, Daniel M., Dodhia, Hiten, Durbaba, Stevo, O'Gallagher, Kevin, Palmer, Claire, Curcin, Vasa, Aitken, Elizabeth, Bernal, William, Barker, Richard D., Norton, Sam, Gulliford, Martin, Teo, James T.H., Galloway, James, Dobson, Richard J.B., Shah, Ajay M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7545271/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33052324
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2020.100574
_version_ 1783591999468732416
author Zakeri, Rosita
Bendayan, Rebecca
Ashworth, Mark
Bean, Daniel M.
Dodhia, Hiten
Durbaba, Stevo
O'Gallagher, Kevin
Palmer, Claire
Curcin, Vasa
Aitken, Elizabeth
Bernal, William
Barker, Richard D.
Norton, Sam
Gulliford, Martin
Teo, James T.H.
Galloway, James
Dobson, Richard J.B.
Shah, Ajay M.
author_facet Zakeri, Rosita
Bendayan, Rebecca
Ashworth, Mark
Bean, Daniel M.
Dodhia, Hiten
Durbaba, Stevo
O'Gallagher, Kevin
Palmer, Claire
Curcin, Vasa
Aitken, Elizabeth
Bernal, William
Barker, Richard D.
Norton, Sam
Gulliford, Martin
Teo, James T.H.
Galloway, James
Dobson, Richard J.B.
Shah, Ajay M.
author_sort Zakeri, Rosita
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: People of minority ethnic backgrounds may be disproportionately affected by severe COVID-19. Whether this relates to increased infection risk, more severe disease progression, or worse in-hospital survival is unknown. The contribution of comorbidities or socioeconomic deprivation to ethnic patterning of outcomes is also unclear. METHODS: We conducted a case-control and a cohort study in an inner city primary and secondary care setting to examine whether ethnic background affects the risk of hospital admission with severe COVID-19 and/or in-hospital mortality. Inner city adult residents admitted to hospital with confirmed COVID-19 (n = 872 cases) were compared with 3,488 matched controls randomly sampled from a primary healthcare database comprising 344,083 people residing in the same region. For the cohort study, we studied 1827 adults consecutively admitted with COVID-19. The primary exposure variable was self-defined ethnicity. Analyses were adjusted for socio-demographic and clinical variables. FINDINGS: The 872 cases comprised 48.1% Black, 33.7% White, 12.6% Mixed/Other and 5.6% Asian patients. In conditional logistic regression analyses, Black and Mixed/Other ethnicity were associated with higher admission risk than white (OR 3.12 [95% CI 2.63–3.71] and 2.97 [2.30–3.85] respectively). Adjustment for comorbidities and deprivation modestly attenuated the association (OR 2.24 [1.83–2.74] for Black, 2.70 [2.03–3.59] for Mixed/Other). Asian ethnicity was not associated with higher admission risk (adjusted OR 1.01 [0.70–1.46]). In the cohort study of 1827 patients, 455 (28.9%) died over a median (IQR) of 8 (4–16) days. Age and male sex, but not Black (adjusted HR 1.06 [0.82–1.37]) or Mixed/Other ethnicity (adjusted HR 0.72 [0.47–1.10]), were associated with in-hospital mortality. Asian ethnicity was associated with higher in-hospital mortality but with a large confidence interval (adjusted HR 1.71 [1.15–2.56]). INTERPRETATION: Black and Mixed ethnicity are independently associated with greater admission risk with COVID-19 and may be risk factors for development of severe disease, but do not affect in-hospital mortality risk. Comorbidities and socioeconomic factors only partly account for this and additional ethnicity-related factors may play a large role. The impact of COVID-19 may be different in Asians. FUNDING: British Heart Foundation; the National Institute for Health Research; Health Data Research UK.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7545271
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-75452712020-10-09 A case-control and cohort study to determine the relationship between ethnic background and severe COVID-19 Zakeri, Rosita Bendayan, Rebecca Ashworth, Mark Bean, Daniel M. Dodhia, Hiten Durbaba, Stevo O'Gallagher, Kevin Palmer, Claire Curcin, Vasa Aitken, Elizabeth Bernal, William Barker, Richard D. Norton, Sam Gulliford, Martin Teo, James T.H. Galloway, James Dobson, Richard J.B. Shah, Ajay M. EClinicalMedicine Research Paper BACKGROUND: People of minority ethnic backgrounds may be disproportionately affected by severe COVID-19. Whether this relates to increased infection risk, more severe disease progression, or worse in-hospital survival is unknown. The contribution of comorbidities or socioeconomic deprivation to ethnic patterning of outcomes is also unclear. METHODS: We conducted a case-control and a cohort study in an inner city primary and secondary care setting to examine whether ethnic background affects the risk of hospital admission with severe COVID-19 and/or in-hospital mortality. Inner city adult residents admitted to hospital with confirmed COVID-19 (n = 872 cases) were compared with 3,488 matched controls randomly sampled from a primary healthcare database comprising 344,083 people residing in the same region. For the cohort study, we studied 1827 adults consecutively admitted with COVID-19. The primary exposure variable was self-defined ethnicity. Analyses were adjusted for socio-demographic and clinical variables. FINDINGS: The 872 cases comprised 48.1% Black, 33.7% White, 12.6% Mixed/Other and 5.6% Asian patients. In conditional logistic regression analyses, Black and Mixed/Other ethnicity were associated with higher admission risk than white (OR 3.12 [95% CI 2.63–3.71] and 2.97 [2.30–3.85] respectively). Adjustment for comorbidities and deprivation modestly attenuated the association (OR 2.24 [1.83–2.74] for Black, 2.70 [2.03–3.59] for Mixed/Other). Asian ethnicity was not associated with higher admission risk (adjusted OR 1.01 [0.70–1.46]). In the cohort study of 1827 patients, 455 (28.9%) died over a median (IQR) of 8 (4–16) days. Age and male sex, but not Black (adjusted HR 1.06 [0.82–1.37]) or Mixed/Other ethnicity (adjusted HR 0.72 [0.47–1.10]), were associated with in-hospital mortality. Asian ethnicity was associated with higher in-hospital mortality but with a large confidence interval (adjusted HR 1.71 [1.15–2.56]). INTERPRETATION: Black and Mixed ethnicity are independently associated with greater admission risk with COVID-19 and may be risk factors for development of severe disease, but do not affect in-hospital mortality risk. Comorbidities and socioeconomic factors only partly account for this and additional ethnicity-related factors may play a large role. The impact of COVID-19 may be different in Asians. FUNDING: British Heart Foundation; the National Institute for Health Research; Health Data Research UK. Elsevier 2020-10-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7545271/ /pubmed/33052324 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2020.100574 Text en © 2020 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Zakeri, Rosita
Bendayan, Rebecca
Ashworth, Mark
Bean, Daniel M.
Dodhia, Hiten
Durbaba, Stevo
O'Gallagher, Kevin
Palmer, Claire
Curcin, Vasa
Aitken, Elizabeth
Bernal, William
Barker, Richard D.
Norton, Sam
Gulliford, Martin
Teo, James T.H.
Galloway, James
Dobson, Richard J.B.
Shah, Ajay M.
A case-control and cohort study to determine the relationship between ethnic background and severe COVID-19
title A case-control and cohort study to determine the relationship between ethnic background and severe COVID-19
title_full A case-control and cohort study to determine the relationship between ethnic background and severe COVID-19
title_fullStr A case-control and cohort study to determine the relationship between ethnic background and severe COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed A case-control and cohort study to determine the relationship between ethnic background and severe COVID-19
title_short A case-control and cohort study to determine the relationship between ethnic background and severe COVID-19
title_sort case-control and cohort study to determine the relationship between ethnic background and severe covid-19
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7545271/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33052324
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2020.100574
work_keys_str_mv AT zakerirosita acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT bendayanrebecca acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT ashworthmark acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT beandanielm acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT dodhiahiten acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT durbabastevo acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT ogallagherkevin acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT palmerclaire acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT curcinvasa acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT aitkenelizabeth acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT bernalwilliam acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT barkerrichardd acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT nortonsam acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT gullifordmartin acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT teojamesth acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT gallowayjames acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT dobsonrichardjb acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT shahajaym acasecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT zakerirosita casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT bendayanrebecca casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT ashworthmark casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT beandanielm casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT dodhiahiten casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT durbabastevo casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT ogallagherkevin casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT palmerclaire casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT curcinvasa casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT aitkenelizabeth casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT bernalwilliam casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT barkerrichardd casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT nortonsam casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT gullifordmartin casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT teojamesth casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT gallowayjames casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT dobsonrichardjb casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19
AT shahajaym casecontrolandcohortstudytodeterminetherelationshipbetweenethnicbackgroundandseverecovid19