Risk factors for severe COVID-19 in hospitalized adults differ by age
Study sheds light on which hospitalized patients are most likely to
become very sick or die
Date:
April 28, 2022
Source:
Institute for Systems Biology
Summary:
A new study provides previously unknown answers about which
hospitalized COVID-19 patients are most likely to need mechanical
ventilation or to die. Researchers showed that vital signs and lab
results at the time of hospital admission -- not comorbidities
and demographics -- are the most accurate predictors of disease
severity.
FULL STORY ==========================================================================
A just-published study provides previously unknown answers about which hospitalized COVID-19 patients are most likely to need mechanical
ventilation or to die.
========================================================================== Researchers showed that vital signs and lab results at the time of
hospital admission are the most accurate predictors of disease severity.
"Our models show that chronic conditions, comorbidities, sex, race and ethnicity are much less important in the hospital setting for early
prediction of critical illness," said Dr. Sevda Molani, lead author of
a paper published in the journal Scientific Reports.
Molani and team looked at risk factors based on two age groups of
hospitalized patients, one being between 18 and 50 years old and the
other being 50 or older, and found that risk factors that lead to severe
cases and/or death differ with younger vs. older patients.
For example:
* Body mass index is a more important predictor of COVID-19
severity for
younger patients than for older patients.
* Many comorbidities such as malignancy, cardiomyopathy and COPD have
higher odds ratios for severe outcomes in younger patients than
in older patients.
* For both older and younger patients, vital signs, early hospital
laboratory tests and the need for supplemental oxygen are more
useful for predicting severe outcomes than comorbidities and
demographics.
The findings are meaningful in the clinical setting.
"Risk prediction in COVID-19 is complex as the disease course is
highly variable between persons, ranging from completely asymptomatic
in some people to critical illness or death in others. While age is
known to be highly predictive of death, other risk factors within age
strata are incompletely explored. This study challenges our dogma that comorbidities are the major drivers of severe outcomes like mechanical ventilation or death in hospitalized patients with COVID-19. Instead, we
find that other physiological features that can be measured within one
hour of hospitalization more strongly predict who will go on to severe outcomes," said Dr. Jason Goldman, an infectious disease specialist
at Swedish Providence and a member of the study team. "These findings
remind the treating clinician to incorporate physiological parameters
into risk stratification, and subsequently into decisions on treatment allocations." The retrospective study examined the electronic health
records of more than 6,900 patients between June 31 and November 15 of
2021. The vast majority of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 -- 92
percent of the younger patients and 75 percent of the older patients --
had not received COVID-19 vaccination.
Existing risk models for hospitalized patients were developed early on
in the pandemic. This research addresses the need for updated models that reflect current standard of care for COVID-19, where fewer uncommon labs
are used, and more therapeutic treatment options are available. Future investigations will benefit from finer granularity of subdivisions by
age, BMI, and more detailed variables on conditions and drugs that affect individual immune response.
"Chronic medical conditions are still important risk factors for severe
COVID- 19. However, when a patient has just been admitted to the hospital, their current status can be more helpful in predicting what level of care
they are likely to need," said ISB Assistant Professor Dr. Jennifer
Hadlock, corresponding author of the study. "As the standards of
care for COVID-19 evolve, our risk models need to evolve with them."
The collaborative study was conducted by researchers at ISB, Swedish Providence, Onegevity and Mayo Clinic Jacksonville.
========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Institute_for_Systems_Biology. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. Sevda Molani, Patricia V. Hernandez, Ryan T. Roper, Venkata
R. Duvvuri,
Andrew M. Baumgartner, Jason D. Goldman, Nilu"fer Ertekin-Taner,
Cory C.
Funk, Nathan D. Price, Noa Rappaport, Jennifer
J. Hadlock. Risk factors for severe COVID-19 differ by age
for hospitalized adults. Scientific Reports, 2022; 12 (1) DOI:
10.1038/s41598-022-10344-3 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/04/220428085855.htm
--- up 8 weeks, 3 days, 10 hours, 51 minutes
* Origin: -=> Castle Rock BBS <=- Now Husky HPT Powered! (1:317/3)