| Literature DB >> 33034689 |
Alvin Richards-Belle1, Izabella Orzechowska1, Doug W Gould1, Karen Thomas1, James C Doidge1, Paul R Mouncey1, Michael D Christian2, Manu Shankar-Hari3, David A Harrison1, Kathryn M Rowan4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To describe critical care patients with COVID-19 across England, Wales and Northern Ireland and compare them with a historic cohort of patients with other viral pneumonias (non-COVID-19) and with international cohorts of COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Coronavirus; Critical care; Outcomes; Pandemic
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33034689 PMCID: PMC7545019 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-020-06267-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Characteristics, acute illness severity, outcomes and organ support of critical care patients with COVID-19 compared with critical care patients with other viral pneumonias (non-COVID-19)
| Patients with COVID-19 | Patients with other viral pneumonias (non-COVID-19) ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Patient characteristics | ||
| Age (years), median (IQR) | 60 (51–68) | 61 (48–71) |
| Age categories (years), | ||
| < 50 | 2331 (21.5%) | 1594 (28.4%) |
| 50–69 | 6203 (57.3%) | 2361 (42.1%) |
| 70+ | 2290 (21.2%) | 1654 (29.5%) |
| Sex, | ||
| Female | 3237 (29.9%) | 2641 (45.7%) |
| Male | 7590 (70.1%) | 3141 (54.3%) |
| Ethnicity, | ||
| White | 6885 (63.5%) | 4951 (85.6%) |
| Asian | 1657 (15.3%) | 325 (5.6%) |
| Black | 995 (9.2%) | 155 (2.7%) |
| Mixed | 190 (1.8%) | 52 (0.9%) |
| Other | 691 (6.4%) | 117 (2%) |
| Not stated | 416 (3.8%) | 182 (3.1%) |
| Quintile of index of multiple deprivationa | ||
| 1—least deprived | 1421 (14.2%) | 873 (15.3%) |
| 2 | 1599 (16%) | 999 (17.5%) |
| 3 | 1944 (19.5%) | 1115 (19.5%) |
| 4 | 2383 (23.9%) | 1232 (21.6%) |
| 5—most deprived | 2641 (26.4%) | 1489 (26.1%) |
| BMI (kg/m2), median (IQR) | 28.3 (24.8–33) | 26.6 (23.1–31.2) |
| BMI categories (kg/m2), | ||
| 18.5 to < 25 | 2704 (26.3%) | 2243 (39.6%) |
| 25 to < 30 | 3525 (34.3%) | 1691 (29.9%) |
| 30 to < 40 | 3231 (31.4%) | 1330 (23.5%) |
| 40+ | 822 (8%) | 394 (7%) |
| Prior dependency, | ||
| Able to live without assistance in daily activities | 9580 (89.4%) | 4244 (73.6%) |
| Some assistance with daily activities | 1094 (10.2%) | 1392 (24.1%) |
| Total assistance with all daily activities | 40 (0.4%) | 134 (2.3%) |
| Serious comorbiditiesb, | ||
| Cardiovascular | 68 (0.6%) | 78 (1.4%) |
| Respiratory | 128 (1.2%) | 295 (5.1%) |
| Renal | 183 (1.7%) | 120 (2.1%) |
| Liver | 51 (0.5%) | 54 (0.9%) |
| Metastatic disease | 59 (0.6%) | 68 (1.2%) |
| Haematological malignancy | 208 (1.9%) | 268 (4.6%) |
| Immunocompromise | 382 (3.6%) | 503 (8.7%) |
| Any | 883 (8.2%) | 1059 (18.4%) |
| Prior hospital stay (days), median (IQR) | 1 (0–3) | 1 (0–2) |
| Source of admission, | ||
| Not in hospital | 13 (0.1%) | 12 (0.2%) |
| Emergency department | 3636 (33.6%) | 2264 (39.2%) |
| Ward | 6571 (60.7%) | 2859 (49.4%) |
| Other hospital locationc | 614 (5.7%) | 647 (11.2%) |
| Acute illness severityd | ||
| 15.8 (11.3–22) | 18 (11.6–26.4) | |
| ≤ 13.3 kPa (≤ 100 mmHg) | 3758 (36.9%) | 1819 (33.2%) |
| 13.3–26.7 kPa (100-200 mmHg) | 4871 (47.8%) | 2318 (42.4%) |
| > 26.7 kPa (> 200 mmHg) | 1551 (15.2%) | 1328 (24.3%) |
| APACHE II acute physiology score,f median (IQR) | 11 (8–14) | 13 (9–16) |
| APACHE II score,g median (IQR) | 15 (11–18) | 17 (13–21) |
| Organ support in critical careh,i | ||
| Advanced respiratory support | ||
| Receipt, | 7702 (72%) | 2721 (48.4%) |
| Duration (calendar days), median (IQR) | 13 (7–23) | 9 (4–17) |
| Basic respiratory support (only) | ||
| Receipt, | 2736 (25.6%) | 2609 (46.4%) |
| Duration (calendar days), median (IQR) | 4 (3–7) | 3 (2–5) |
| Advanced cardiovascular support | ||
| Receipt, | 3255 (30.4%) | 1261 (22.4%) |
| Duration (calendar days), median (IQR) | 3 (2–6) | 3 (2–5) |
| Basic cardiovascular support (only) | ||
| Receipt, | 6969 (65.1%) | 4134 (73.5%) |
| Duration (calendar days), median (IQR) | 9 (5–18) | 5 (3–10) |
| Renal support | ||
| Receipt, | 2850 (26.7%) | 957 (17%) |
| Duration (calendar days), median (IQR) | 8 (3–15) | 6 (3–12) |
| Neurological support | ||
| Receipt, | 973 (9.1%) | 320 (5.7%) |
| Duration (calendar days), median (IQR) | 4 (2–9) | 2.5 (1–5) |
| Outcomes | ||
| Critical care | ||
| Survived, | 6464 (59.7%) | 4423 (76.5%) |
| Died, | 4240 (39.1%) | 1203 (20.8%) |
| Last known to be still in unit, | 130 (1.2%) | 156 (2.7%) |
| Acute hospital | ||
| Survived, | 5868 (54.2%) | 4156 (71.9%) |
| Died, | 4554 (42%) | 1427 (24.7%) |
| Last known to be still in acute hospital, | 412 (3.8%) | 199 (3.4%) |
| Duration of stay (calendar days) | ||
| Critical care, median (IQR) | 10 (5–22) | 6 (3–13) |
| Survived, median (IQR) | 12 (5–27) | 6 (3–13) |
| Died, median (IQR) | 9 (5–16) | 6 (2–13) |
| Acute hospital, median (IQR) | 17 (9–32) | 14 (8–28) |
| Survived, median (IQR) | 24 (12–43) | 15 (9–30) |
| Died, median (IQR) | 12 (7–19) | 9 (4–18) |
BMI body mass index, CPR cardiopulmonary resuscitation, P/F ratio PaO2/FiO2 ratio, ICNARC Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre, APACHE II Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation, Second Version
aHigher values indicate greater deprivation
bSerious comorbidities are defined as cardiovascular: symptoms of fatigue, claudication, dyspnoea or angina at rest; respiratory: shortness of breath with light activity or home ventilation; renal: receipt of renal replacement therapy for end-stage renal disease; liver: biopsy-proven cirrhosis, portal hypertension or hepatic encephalopathy; metastatic disease: distant metastases; haematological malignancy: acute or chronic leukaemia, multiple myeloma or lymphoma; and immunocompromise: receipt of chemotherapy, radiotherapy or daily high-dose steroid treatment in previous 6 months, HIV/AIDS or a congenital immune deficiency
cOther hospital location includes obstetrics areas, intermediate care areas, theatres, recovery, imaging departments, specialist treatment areas and clinics
dWithin 24 h of admission to the critical care unit
eP/F ratio derived from the arterial blood gas with the lowest PaO2 during the first 24 h
fAPACHE II acute physiology score (range 0–60) was calculated using physiological parameters recorded during the first 24 h in the critical care unit
gAPACHE II score (range 0–71; higher scores indicate greater severity) was calculated using the APACHE II acute physiology score plus weightings for age and serious comorbidities
hBased on patients discharged alive from, or died in, critical care. Organ supports are defined according to Critical Care Minimum Data Set [8] as Advanced respiratory support: invasive ventilation, BPAP via trans-laryngeal tube or tracheostomy, CPAP via trans-laryngeal tube, extracorporeal respiratory support; Basic respiratory support: > 50% oxygen by face mask, close observation due to potential for acute deterioration, physiotherapy/suction to clear secretions at least two-hourly, recently extubated after a period of mechanical ventilation, mask/hood CPAP/BPAP, non-invasive ventilation, CPAP via a tracheostomy, intubated to protect airway; Advanced cardiovascular support: multiple IV/rhythm controlling drugs (at least one vasoactive), continuous observation of cardiac output, intra-aortic balloon pump, temporary cardiac pacemaker; Basic cardiovascular support: central venous catheter, arterial line, single IV vasoactive/rhythm controlling drug; Renal support: acute renal replacement therapy, renal replacement therapy for chronic renal failure where other organ support is received; Liver support: management of coagulopathy and/or portal hypertension for acute on chronic hepatocellular failure or primary acute hepatocellular failure; Neurological support: central nervous system depression sufficient to prejudice airway, invasive neurological monitoring, continuous IV medication to control seizures, therapeutic hypothermia
iDuration of organ support is recorded as the number of calendar days (00:00–23:59) on which support was received at any time (in those receiving the organ support)
Fig. 1Critical care patients with COVID-19 compared to the UK general population for age/sex, ethnicity, level of deprivation and body mass index
Fig. 2Outcomes for critical care patients with COVID-19 by age/sex, P/F ratio categories (ventilated or not in the first 24 h), APACHE II acute physiology score and type and combinations of organ support received
Fig. 3Survival to acute hospital discharge for critical care patients with COVID-19. aPatients are included in this survival analysis at day 0 if they were admitted at least two weeks prior to data extraction and censored on subsequent days after reaching either their last known follow-up date, or at two weeks prior to data extraction (whichever was earliest)
Fig. 4Acute hospital mortality for critical care patients with COVID-19 compared with other viral pneumonias (non-COVID-19) by age/sex, P/F ratio category (ventilated or not in the first 24 h), APACHE II acute physiology score and type and combinations of organ support received
| Critical care patients with COVID-19 were disproportionately non-white, from more deprived areas and more likely to be male and obese. Conventional severity scoring appeared not to adequately reflect their acute severity, with the distribution across PaO2/FiO2 ratio categories indicating acutely severe respiratory disease. Critical care patients with COVID-19 experience high mortality and place a great burden on critical care services. |