Gray William K, Navaratnam Annakan V, Day Jamie, Wendon Julia, Briggs Tim W R
Getting It Right First Time programme, NHS England and NHS Improvement, London, United Kingdom.
Kings College Hospital, London, United Kingdom.
Lancet Reg Health Eur. 2021 Jun;5:100104. doi: 10.1016/j.lanepe.2021.100104. Epub 2021 Apr 30.
Previous research by our team identified factors associated with in-hospital mortality in patients with a diagnosis of COVID-19 in England between March and May 2020. The aim of the current paper was to investigate the changing role of demographics and co-morbidity, with a particular focus on ethnicity, as risk factors for in-hospital mortality over an extended period.
This was a retrospective observational study using the Hospital Episode Statistics administrative dataset. All patients aged ≥ 18 years in England with a diagnosis of COVID-19 who had a hospital stay that was completed (discharged alive or died) between 1st March and 30th September 2020 were included. In-hospital mortality was the primary outcome of interest. Multilevel logistic regression was used to model the relationship between in-hospital mortality with adjustment for the covariates: age, sex, deprivation, ethnicity, date of discharge and a number of comorbidities.
Compared to patients in March-May ( = 93,379), patients in June-September ( = 24,059) were younger, more likely to be female and of Asian ethnicity, but less likely to be of Black ethnicity. In-hospital mortality rates, adjusted for covariates, declined from 33-34% in March to 11-12% in September. Compared to the March-May period, Bangladeshi, Indian and Other Asian ethnicity patients had a lower relative odds of death (compared to White ethnicity patients) during June-September. For Pakistani patients, the decline in-hospital mortality rates was more modest across the same time periods with the relative odds of death increasing slightly (odds ratio (95% confidence interval)) 1.24 (1.10 to 1.40) and 1.35 (1.08 to 1.69) respectively. From March-May to June-September the relative odds of death in patients with a diagnosis of metastatic carcinoma increased (1.90 (1.73 to 2.08) vs 3.01 (2.55 to 3.54)) but decreased for male patients (1.44 (1.39 to 1.49) vs 1.27 (1.17 to 1.38)) and patients with obesity (1.42 (1.34 to 1.52) vs 0.97 (0.83 to 1.14)) and diabetes without complications (1.14 (1.10 to 1.19) vs 0.95 (0.87 to 1.05)).
In-hospital mortality rates for patients with a diagnosis of COVID-19 have fallen substantially and there is evidence that the relative importance of some covariates has changed since the start of the pandemic. These patterns should continue to be tracked as new variants of the virus emerge, vaccination programmes are rolled out and hospital pressures fluctuate.
我们团队之前的研究确定了2020年3月至5月期间英格兰确诊为新冠肺炎患者的院内死亡相关因素。本文的目的是调查人口统计学和合并症的变化作用,特别关注种族,作为长期住院死亡的风险因素。
这是一项使用医院事件统计管理数据集的回顾性观察性研究。纳入了2020年3月1日至9月30日期间在英格兰所有年龄≥18岁、确诊为新冠肺炎且住院结束(存活出院或死亡)的患者。院内死亡是主要关注的结果。采用多水平逻辑回归对院内死亡与协变量(年龄、性别、贫困程度、种族、出院日期和多种合并症)进行调整后的关系进行建模。
与3月至5月的患者(n = 93379)相比,6月至9月的患者(n = 24059)更年轻,更可能为女性且为亚裔,但不太可能为黑人。经协变量调整后的院内死亡率从3月的33% - 34%降至9月的11% - 12%。与3月至5月期间相比,6月至9月期间,孟加拉裔、印度裔和其他亚裔患者的相对死亡几率较低(与白人患者相比)。对于巴基斯坦患者,同期院内死亡率下降幅度较小,死亡相对几率略有增加(优势比(95%置信区间)),分别为1.24(1.10至1.40)和1.35(1.08至1.69)。从3月至5月到6月至9月,确诊为转移性癌的患者的相对死亡几率增加(1.90(1.73至2.08)对3.01(2.55至3.54)),但男性患者(1.44(1.39至1.49)对1.27(1.17至1.38))、肥胖患者(1.42(1.34至1.52)对0.97(0.83至1.14))和无并发症糖尿病患者(1.14(1.10至1.19)对0.95(0.87至1.05))的相对死亡几率下降。
确诊为新冠肺炎患者的院内死亡率大幅下降,有证据表明自疫情开始以来一些协变量的相对重要性发生了变化。随着病毒新变种出现、疫苗接种计划推出以及医院压力波动,这些模式应继续得到追踪。