Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol; microbiology registrar, Department of Infection Science, North Bristol NHS trust.
Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol; respiratory registrar, Academic Respiratory Unit, North Bristol NHS Trust, Bristol.
Br J Gen Pract. 2021 Jan 28;71(703):e148-e156. doi: 10.3399/bjgp20X713981. Print 2021.
Lymphopenia (reduced lymphocyte count) during infections, such as pneumonia, is common and is associated with increased mortality. Little is known about the relationship between lymphocyte count before developing infections and mortality risk.
To identify whether patients with lymphopenia who develop pneumonia have increased risk of death.
A cohort study set in the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) linked to national death records, in primary care. This database is representative of the UK population and is extracted from routine records.
Patients aged >50 years with a pneumonia diagnosis were included from January 1998 until January 2019. The relationship between lymphocyte count and mortality was measured, using a time-to-event (multivariable Cox regression) approach, adjusted for age, sex, social factors, and potential causes of lymphopenia. The primary analysis used the most recent test before pneumonia. The primary outcome was 28-day, all-cause mortality.
A total of 40 909 participants with pneumonia were included, with 28 556 having had a lymphocyte count test before pneumonia (median time between test and diagnosis was 677 days). When lymphocyte count was categorised (0-1 × 10 cells/L, 1-2 × 10 cells/L, 2-3 × 10 cells/L, >3 × 10 cells/L, never tested), both 28-day and 1-year mortality varied significantly: 14%, 9.2%, 6.5%, 6.1%, and 25%, respectively, for 28-day mortality, and 41%, 29%, 22%, 20%, and 52% for 1-year mortality. In multivariable Cox regression, lower lymphocyte count was consistently associated with increased hazard of death.
Lymphopenia is an independent predictor of mortality in primary care pneumonia. Even low-normal lymphopenia (1-2 × 10 cells/L) is associated with an increase in short- and long-term mortality compared with higher counts.
感染(如肺炎)期间的淋巴细胞减少(淋巴细胞计数降低)很常见,并且与死亡率增加有关。关于发生感染之前的淋巴细胞计数与死亡风险之间的关系,人们知之甚少。
确定发生肺炎的淋巴细胞减少症患者的死亡风险是否增加。
这是一项在临床实践研究数据库(CPRD)中进行的队列研究,该数据库与全国死亡记录相关联,研究地点为初级保健。该数据库代表了英国人群,并且是从常规记录中提取的。
纳入年龄> 50 岁、有肺炎诊断的患者,研究时间为 1998 年 1 月至 2019 年 1 月。使用时间事件(多变量 Cox 回归)方法来衡量淋巴细胞计数与死亡率之间的关系,该方法针对年龄、性别、社会因素和潜在的淋巴细胞减少症原因进行了调整。主要分析使用肺炎前最近的一次检测。主要结局为 28 天全因死亡率。
共纳入 40909 名患有肺炎的患者,其中 28556 名患者在肺炎前进行了淋巴细胞计数检测(检测与诊断之间的中位时间为 677 天)。当淋巴细胞计数分类(0-1×10 个细胞/L、1-2×10 个细胞/L、2-3×10 个细胞/L、>3×10 个细胞/L、从未检测)时,28 天和 1 年死亡率均有显著差异:28 天死亡率分别为 14%、9.2%、6.5%、6.1%和 25%,1 年死亡率分别为 41%、29%、22%、20%和 52%。在多变量 Cox 回归中,较低的淋巴细胞计数与死亡风险增加一致相关。
淋巴细胞减少症是初级保健肺炎患者死亡的独立预测因子。即使是低正常值的淋巴细胞减少症(1-2×10 个细胞/L)与较高计数相比,也与短期和长期死亡率增加相关。