Keele Cardiovascular Research Group, School of Medicine, Keele University, Keele, UK.
Department of Cardiology, Royal Stoke University Hospital, Stoke On Trent, UK.
Heart. 2021 May;107(9):734-740. doi: 10.1136/heartjnl-2020-318356. Epub 2021 Mar 8.
There are concerns that healthcare and outcomes of black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) communities are disproportionately impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. We investigated admission rates, treatment and mortality of BAME with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) during COVID-19.
Using multisource national healthcare records, patients hospitalised with AMI in England during 1 February-27 May 2020 were included in the COVID-19 group, whereas patients admitted during the same period in the previous three consecutive years were included in a pre-COVID-19 group. Multilevel hierarchical regression analyses were used to quantify the changes in-hospital and 7-day mortality in BAME compared with whites.
Of 73 746 patients, higher proportions of BAME patients (16.7% vs 10.1%) were hospitalised with AMI during the COVID-19 period compared with pre-COVID-19. BAME patients admitted during the COVID-19 period were younger, male and likely to present with ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction. COVID-19 BAME group admitted with non-ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction less frequently received coronary angiography (86.1% vs 90.0%, p<0.001) and had a longer median delay to reperfusion (4.1 hours vs 3.7 hours, p<0.001) compared with whites. BAME had higher in-hospital (OR 1.68, 95% CI 1.27 to 2.28) and 7-day mortality (OR 1.81 95% CI 1.31 to 2.19) during COVID-19 compared with pre-COVID-19 period.
In this multisource linked cohort study, compared with whites, BAME patients had proportionally higher hospitalisation rates with AMI, less frequently received guidelines indicated care and had higher early mortality during COVID-19 period compared with pre-COVID-19 period. There is a need to develop clinical pathways to achieve equity in the management of these vulnerable populations.
人们担心黑人和少数族裔(BAME)群体的医疗保健和结果受到 COVID-19 大流行的不成比例的影响。我们研究了 COVID-19 期间 BAME 人群中急性心肌梗死(AMI)的入院率、治疗和死亡率。
使用多源国家医疗记录,将 2020 年 2 月 1 日至 5 月 27 日期间在英格兰因 AMI 住院的患者纳入 COVID-19 组,而将前三年同期住院的患者纳入 COVID-19 前组。采用多层次分层回归分析来量化与白人相比,BAME 患者住院期间和 7 天死亡率的变化。
在 73746 名患者中,与 COVID-19 前相比,BAME 患者(16.7%比 10.1%)因 AMI 住院的比例更高。在 COVID-19 期间入院的 BAME 患者更年轻、男性,更可能出现 ST 段抬高型急性心肌梗死。与白人相比,COVID-19 期间 BAME 组中因非 ST 段抬高型急性心肌梗死入院的患者接受冠状动脉造影的比例较低(86.1%比 90.0%,p<0.001),再灌注中位数延迟时间较长(4.1 小时比 3.7 小时,p<0.001)。与 COVID-19 前相比,BAME 患者住院期间(OR 1.68,95%CI 1.27 至 2.28)和 7 天死亡率(OR 1.81,95%CI 1.31 至 2.19)更高。
在这项多源链接队列研究中,与白人相比,BAME 患者因 AMI 住院的比例较高,接受指南推荐的治疗的比例较低,在 COVID-19 期间的早期死亡率较高,而在 COVID-19 前期间则较低。需要制定临床途径,以实现对这些弱势群体管理的公平性。