Department of Biosystems Engineering, The University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA
Department of Biosystems Engineering, The University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
BMJ Health Care Inform. 2021 May;28(1). doi: 10.1136/bmjhci-2021-100341.
Prior research has reported an increased risk of fatality for patients with cancer, but most studies investigated the risk by comparing cancer to non-cancer patients among COVID-19 infections, where cancer might have contributed to the increased risk. This study is to understand COVID-19's imposed HR of fatality while controlling for covariates, such as age, sex, metastasis status and cancer type.
We conducted survival analyses of 4606 cancer patients with COVID-19 test results from 16 March to 11 October 2020 in UK Biobank and estimated the overall HR of fatality with and without COVID-19 infection. We also examined the HRs of 13 specific cancer types with at least 100 patients using a stratified analysis.
COVID-19 resulted in an overall HR of 7.76 (95% CI 5.78 to 10.40, p<10) by following 4606 patients with cancer for 21 days after the tests. The HR varied among cancer type, with over a 10-fold increase in fatality rate (false discovery rate ≤0.02) for melanoma, haematological malignancies, uterine cancer and kidney cancer. Although COVID-19 imposed a higher risk for localised versus distant metastasis cancers, those of distant metastases yielded higher overall fatality rates due to their multiplicative effects.
The results confirmed prior reports for the increased risk of fatality for patients with COVID-19 plus hematological malignancies and demonstrated similar findings of COVID-19 on melanoma, uterine, and kidney cancers.
The results highlight the heightened risk that COVID-19 imposes on localised and haematological cancer patients and the necessity to vaccinate uninfected patients with cancer promptly, particularly for the cancer types most influenced by COVID-19. Results also suggest the importance of timely care for patients with localised cancer, whether they are infected by COVID-19 or not.
先前的研究报告称,癌症患者的病死率风险增加,但大多数研究都是通过将癌症与 COVID-19 感染中的非癌症患者进行比较来调查这种风险,而在这种情况下,癌症可能导致了风险增加。本研究旨在了解 COVID-19 在控制年龄、性别、转移状态和癌症类型等协变量的情况下对病死率的强制性风险比 (HR)。
我们对 UK Biobank 中 2020 年 3 月 16 日至 10 月 11 日期间患有 COVID-19 检测结果的 4606 例癌症患者进行了生存分析,并估计了有无 COVID-19 感染时的总体病死率 HR。我们还使用分层分析检查了至少有 100 例患者的 13 种特定癌症类型的 HRs。
在对 4606 例癌症患者进行了 21 天的随访后,COVID-19 导致的总体 HR 为 7.76(95%CI 5.78 至 10.40,p<10)。HR 因癌症类型而异,黑色素瘤、血液恶性肿瘤、子宫癌和肾癌的病死率增加了 10 倍以上(假发现率 ≤0.02)。尽管 COVID-19 对局部转移与远处转移癌症施加了更高的风险,但由于其倍增效应,远处转移癌症的总体病死率更高。
研究结果证实了先前关于 COVID-19 合并血液恶性肿瘤患者病死率风险增加的报告,并证明了 COVID-19 对黑色素瘤、子宫癌和肾癌的类似影响。
研究结果强调了 COVID-19 对局部和血液癌症患者的风险增加,以及及时为未感染癌症的患者接种疫苗的必要性,尤其是对受 COVID-19 影响最大的癌症类型。结果还表明,及时为局部癌症患者提供治疗的重要性,无论他们是否感染了 COVID-19。