Literature DB >> 33561834

Development and validation of a prognostic nomogram for predicting in-hospital mortality of COVID-19: a multicenter retrospective cohort study of 4086 cases in China.

Li Li1,2, Xiaoyu Fang3,4, Lixia Cheng5,6, Penghao Wang7, Shen Li7, Hao Yu8, Yao Zhang4, Nan Jiang1, Tingting Zeng1, Chao Hou1, Jing Zhou1, Shiru Li4, Yingzi Pan4, Yitong Li4, Lili Nie4, Yang Li9, Qidi Sun2,5, Hong Jia3, Mengxia Li6,10, Guoqiang Cao1,2, Xiangyu Ma4.   

Abstract

To establish an effective nomogram for predicting in-hospital mortality of COVID-19, a retrospective cohort study was conducted in two hospitals in Wuhan, China, with a total of 4,086 hospitalized COVID-19 cases. All patients have reached therapeutic endpoint (death or discharge). First, a total of 3,022 COVID-19 cases in Wuhan Huoshenshan hospital were divided chronologically into two sets, one (1,780 cases, including 47 died) for nomogram modeling and the other (1,242 cases, including 22 died) for internal validation. We then enrolled 1,064 COVID-19 cases (29 died) in Wuhan Taikang-Tongji hospital for external validation. Independent factors included age (HR for per year increment: 1.05), severity at admission (HR for per rank increment: 2.91), dyspnea (HR: 2.18), cardiovascular disease (HR: 3.25), and levels of lactate dehydrogenase (HR: 4.53), total bilirubin (HR: 2.56), blood glucose (HR: 2.56), and urea (HR: 2.14), which were finally selected into the nomogram. The C-index for the internal resampling (0.97, 95% CI: 0.95-0.98), the internal validation (0.96, 95% CI: 0.94-0.98), and the external validation (0.92, 95% CI: 0.86-0.98) demonstrated the fair discrimination ability. The calibration plots showed optimal agreement between nomogram prediction and actual observation. We established and validated a novel prognostic nomogram that could predict in-hospital mortality of COVID-19 patients.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COVID-19; SARS-Cov-2; coronavirus; nomogram; survival

Year:  2021        PMID: 33561834     DOI: 10.18632/aging.202605

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Aging (Albany NY)        ISSN: 1945-4589            Impact factor:   5.682


  3 in total

1.  Post-sequelae one year after hospital discharge among older COVID-19 patients: A multi-center prospective cohort study.

Authors:  Xiaoyu Fang; Chao Ming; Yuan Cen; Hao Lin; Kegang Zhan; Sha Yang; Li Li; Guoqiang Cao; Qi Li; Xiangyu Ma
Journal:  J Infect       Date:  2021-12-10       Impact factor: 6.072

2.  Response to: Comment on short- and long-term prognosis of glycemic control in COVID-19 patients with type 2 diabetes.

Authors:  K Zhan; X Zhang; B Wang; Z Jiang; X Fang; S Yang; H Jia; L Li; G Cao; K Zhang; X Ma
Journal:  QJM       Date:  2022-08-13

3.  Response to letter to Editor by Dr Rohan Magoon entitled 'Glycemic control and COVID-19 outcomes: the missing metabolic players'.

Authors:  Kegang Zhan; Xiaohua Zhang; Bin Wang; Zheng Jiang; Xiaoyu Fang; Sha Yang; Hong Jia; Li Li; Guoqiang Cao; Kejun Zhang; Xiangyu Ma
Journal:  QJM       Date:  2022-02-15
  3 in total

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