Moledina Saadiq M, Maini Alexander A, Gargan Alice, Harland William, Jenney Heloise, Phillips Georgina, Thomas Kate, Chauhan Devkishan, Fertleman Michael
Cutrale Perioperative & Ageing Group, St Mary's Hospital, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Int J Gen Med. 2020 Nov 17;13:1157-1165. doi: 10.2147/IJGM.S271432. eCollection 2020.
BACKGROUND/INTRODUCTION: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has affected all aspects of inpatient hospital medicine with patients admitted from level 1 (general medical wards) to level 3 (intensive care). Often, there are subtle physiological differences in these cohorts of patients. In particular, in intensive care, patients tend to be younger and have increased disease severity. Data, to date, has combined outcomes from medical and intensive care cohorts, or looked exclusively at intensive care. We looked solely at the level 1 (medical) cohort to identify their clinical characteristics and predictors of outcome.
This was a retrospective study of adult patients admitted to a central London teaching hospital with a diagnosis of COVID-19 from 23rd March to 7th April 2020 identified from the hospital electronic database. Any patients who required level 2 or 3 care were excluded.
A total of 229 patients were included for analysis. Increased age and frailty scores were associated with increased 30-day mortality. Reduced renal function and elevated troponin blood levels are also associated with poor outcome. Baseline observations showed that increased oxygen requirement was predictive for mortality. A trend of increased mortality with lower diastolic blood pressure was noted. Lymphopenia was not shown to be related to mortality.
Urea and creatinine are the best predictors of mortality in the level 1 cohort. Unlike previous intensive care data, lymphopenia is not predictive of mortality. We suggest that these factors be considered when prognosticating and for resource allocation for the treatment and escalation of care for patients with COVID-19 infection.
背景/引言:2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行影响了住院医学的各个方面,患者从1级(普通内科病房)到3级(重症监护病房)均有收治。通常,这些患者群体存在细微的生理差异。特别是在重症监护病房,患者往往更年轻且疾病严重程度更高。迄今为止,数据将内科和重症监护患者群体的结果合并在一起,或者仅关注重症监护患者。我们仅研究了1级(内科)患者群体,以确定他们的临床特征和预后预测因素。
这是一项对2020年3月23日至4月7日入住伦敦市中心一家教学医院且诊断为COVID-19的成年患者的回顾性研究,数据来自医院电子数据库。排除任何需要2级或3级护理的患者。
共有229名患者纳入分析。年龄增加和虚弱评分升高与30天死亡率增加相关。肾功能降低和肌钙蛋白血水平升高也与不良预后相关。基线观察表明,吸氧需求增加可预测死亡率。注意到舒张压降低有死亡率增加的趋势。淋巴细胞减少与死亡率无关。
尿素和肌酐是1级患者群体中死亡率的最佳预测指标。与先前的重症监护数据不同,淋巴细胞减少不能预测死亡率。我们建议在对COVID-19感染患者进行预后评估以及为治疗和加强护理进行资源分配时考虑这些因素。