Cargando…

Hospitalised COVID-19 outcomes are predicted by hypoxaemia and pneumonia phenotype irrespective of the timing of their emergence

Despite the known clinical importance of hypoxemia and pneumonia, there is a paucity of evidence for these variables with respect to risk of mortality and short-term outcomes among those hospitalised with COVID-19. OBJECTIVE: Describe the prevalence and clinical course of patients hospitalised with...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Salter, Brittany, DeBenedictis, Bianca, Spatafora, Laura, Kapralik, Jessica, Luo, Candice, Qiu, Steven, Dawson, Laura, Junek, Mats, Pitre, Tyler, Jones, Aaron, Beauchamp, Marla, Kruisselbrink, Rebecca, Duong, MyLinh, Costa, Andrew P, Tsang, Jennifer LY, Ho, Terence
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9805826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36581424
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062453
_version_ 1784862413459292160
author Salter, Brittany
DeBenedictis, Bianca
Spatafora, Laura
Kapralik, Jessica
Luo, Candice
Qiu, Steven
Dawson, Laura
Junek, Mats
Pitre, Tyler
Jones, Aaron
Beauchamp, Marla
Kruisselbrink, Rebecca
Duong, MyLinh
Costa, Andrew P
Tsang, Jennifer LY
Ho, Terence
author_facet Salter, Brittany
DeBenedictis, Bianca
Spatafora, Laura
Kapralik, Jessica
Luo, Candice
Qiu, Steven
Dawson, Laura
Junek, Mats
Pitre, Tyler
Jones, Aaron
Beauchamp, Marla
Kruisselbrink, Rebecca
Duong, MyLinh
Costa, Andrew P
Tsang, Jennifer LY
Ho, Terence
author_sort Salter, Brittany
collection PubMed
description Despite the known clinical importance of hypoxemia and pneumonia, there is a paucity of evidence for these variables with respect to risk of mortality and short-term outcomes among those hospitalised with COVID-19. OBJECTIVE: Describe the prevalence and clinical course of patients hospitalised with COVID-19 based on oxygenation and pneumonia status at presentation and determine the incidence of emergent hypoxaemia or radiographic pneumonia during admission. METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted using a Canadian regional registry. Patients were stratified according to hypoxaemia/pneumonia phenotype and prevalence. Clinical parameters were compared between phenotypes using χ(2) and one-way Analysis of variance (ANOVA). Cox analysis estimated adjusted Hazard Ratios (HR) for associations between disease outcomes and phenotypes. RESULTS: At emergency department (ED) admission, the prevalence of pneumonia and hypoxaemia was 43% and 50%, respectively, and when stratified to phenotypes: 28.2% hypoxaemia(+)/pneumonia(+), 22.2% hypoxaemia(+)/pneumonia(−), 14.5% hypoxaemia(−)/pneumonia(+) and 35.1% hypoxaemia(−)/pneumonia(−). Mortality was 31.1% in the hypoxaemia(+)/pneumonia(−) group and 26.3% in the hypoxaemia(+)/pneumonia(+) group. Hypoxaemia with pneumonia and without pneumonia predicted higher probability of death. Hypoxaemia either <24 hours or ≥24 hours after hospitalisation predicted higher mortality and need for home oxygen compared with those without hypoxaemia. Patients with early hypoxaemia had higher probability of Intensive care unit (ICU) admission compared with those with late hypoxaemia. CONCLUSION: Mortality in COVID-19 infection is predicted by hypoxaemia with or without pneumonia and was greatest in patients who initially presented with hypoxaemia. The emergence of hypoxaemia was predicted by radiographic pneumonia. Patients with early and emergent hypoxaemia had similar mortality but were less likely to be admitted to ICU. There may be delayed identification of hypoxaemia, which prevents timely escalation of care.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9805826
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-98058262023-01-02 Hospitalised COVID-19 outcomes are predicted by hypoxaemia and pneumonia phenotype irrespective of the timing of their emergence Salter, Brittany DeBenedictis, Bianca Spatafora, Laura Kapralik, Jessica Luo, Candice Qiu, Steven Dawson, Laura Junek, Mats Pitre, Tyler Jones, Aaron Beauchamp, Marla Kruisselbrink, Rebecca Duong, MyLinh Costa, Andrew P Tsang, Jennifer LY Ho, Terence BMJ Open Respiratory Medicine Despite the known clinical importance of hypoxemia and pneumonia, there is a paucity of evidence for these variables with respect to risk of mortality and short-term outcomes among those hospitalised with COVID-19. OBJECTIVE: Describe the prevalence and clinical course of patients hospitalised with COVID-19 based on oxygenation and pneumonia status at presentation and determine the incidence of emergent hypoxaemia or radiographic pneumonia during admission. METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted using a Canadian regional registry. Patients were stratified according to hypoxaemia/pneumonia phenotype and prevalence. Clinical parameters were compared between phenotypes using χ(2) and one-way Analysis of variance (ANOVA). Cox analysis estimated adjusted Hazard Ratios (HR) for associations between disease outcomes and phenotypes. RESULTS: At emergency department (ED) admission, the prevalence of pneumonia and hypoxaemia was 43% and 50%, respectively, and when stratified to phenotypes: 28.2% hypoxaemia(+)/pneumonia(+), 22.2% hypoxaemia(+)/pneumonia(−), 14.5% hypoxaemia(−)/pneumonia(+) and 35.1% hypoxaemia(−)/pneumonia(−). Mortality was 31.1% in the hypoxaemia(+)/pneumonia(−) group and 26.3% in the hypoxaemia(+)/pneumonia(+) group. Hypoxaemia with pneumonia and without pneumonia predicted higher probability of death. Hypoxaemia either <24 hours or ≥24 hours after hospitalisation predicted higher mortality and need for home oxygen compared with those without hypoxaemia. Patients with early hypoxaemia had higher probability of Intensive care unit (ICU) admission compared with those with late hypoxaemia. CONCLUSION: Mortality in COVID-19 infection is predicted by hypoxaemia with or without pneumonia and was greatest in patients who initially presented with hypoxaemia. The emergence of hypoxaemia was predicted by radiographic pneumonia. Patients with early and emergent hypoxaemia had similar mortality but were less likely to be admitted to ICU. There may be delayed identification of hypoxaemia, which prevents timely escalation of care. BMJ Publishing Group 2022-12-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9805826/ /pubmed/36581424 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062453 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Respiratory Medicine
Salter, Brittany
DeBenedictis, Bianca
Spatafora, Laura
Kapralik, Jessica
Luo, Candice
Qiu, Steven
Dawson, Laura
Junek, Mats
Pitre, Tyler
Jones, Aaron
Beauchamp, Marla
Kruisselbrink, Rebecca
Duong, MyLinh
Costa, Andrew P
Tsang, Jennifer LY
Ho, Terence
Hospitalised COVID-19 outcomes are predicted by hypoxaemia and pneumonia phenotype irrespective of the timing of their emergence
title Hospitalised COVID-19 outcomes are predicted by hypoxaemia and pneumonia phenotype irrespective of the timing of their emergence
title_full Hospitalised COVID-19 outcomes are predicted by hypoxaemia and pneumonia phenotype irrespective of the timing of their emergence
title_fullStr Hospitalised COVID-19 outcomes are predicted by hypoxaemia and pneumonia phenotype irrespective of the timing of their emergence
title_full_unstemmed Hospitalised COVID-19 outcomes are predicted by hypoxaemia and pneumonia phenotype irrespective of the timing of their emergence
title_short Hospitalised COVID-19 outcomes are predicted by hypoxaemia and pneumonia phenotype irrespective of the timing of their emergence
title_sort hospitalised covid-19 outcomes are predicted by hypoxaemia and pneumonia phenotype irrespective of the timing of their emergence
topic Respiratory Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9805826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36581424
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062453
work_keys_str_mv AT salterbrittany hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT debenedictisbianca hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT spataforalaura hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT kapralikjessica hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT luocandice hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT qiusteven hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT dawsonlaura hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT junekmats hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT pitretyler hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT jonesaaron hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT beauchampmarla hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT kruisselbrinkrebecca hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT duongmylinh hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT costaandrewp hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT tsangjenniferly hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence
AT hoterence hospitalisedcovid19outcomesarepredictedbyhypoxaemiaandpneumoniaphenotypeirrespectiveofthetimingoftheiremergence