Literature DB >> 33564474

Hospital Mortality and Resource Implications of Hospitalisation with COVID-19 in London, UK: A Prospective Cohort Study.

Savvas Vlachos1, Adrian Wong1, Victoria Metaxa1, Sergio Canestrini1,2, Carmen Lopez Soto1, Jimstan Periselneris3, Kai Lee3, Tanya Patrick3, Christopher Stovin3, Katrina Abernethy3, Budoor Albudoor1, Rishi Banerjee1, Fatimah Juma1, Sara Al-Hashimi1, William Bernal1, Ritesh Maharaj1,4,5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) had a significant impact on the National Health Service in the United Kingdom (UK), with over 35 000 cases reported in London by July 30, 2020. Detailed hospital-level information on patient characteristics, outcomes, and capacity strain is currently scarce but would guide clinical decision-making and inform prioritisation and planning.
METHODS: We aimed to determine factors associated with hospital mortality and describe hospital and ICU strain by conducting a prospective cohort study at a tertiary academic centre in London, UK. We included adult patients admitted to the hospital with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 and followed them up until hospital discharge or 30 days. Baseline factors that are associated with hospital mortality were identified via semiparametric and parametric survival analyses.
RESULTS: Our study included 429 patients: 18% of them were admitted to the ICU, 52% met criteria for ICU outreach team activation, and 61% had treatment limitations placed during their admission. Hospital mortality was 26% and ICU mortality was 34%. Hospital mortality was independently associated with increasing age, male sex, history of chronic kidney disease, increasing baseline C-reactive protein level, and dyspnoea at presentation. COVID-19 resulted in substantial ICU and hospital strain, with up to 9 daily ICU admissions and 41 daily hospital admissions, to a peak census of 80 infected patients admitted in the ICU and 250 in the hospital. Management of such a surge required extensive reorganisation of critical care services with expansion of ICU capacity from 69 to 129 beds, redeployment of staff from other hospital areas, and coordinated hospital-level effort.
CONCLUSIONS: COVID-19 is associated with a high burden of mortality for patients treated on the ward and the ICU and required substantial reconfiguration of critical care services. This has significant implications for planning and resource utilisation.
Copyright © 2021 Savvas Vlachos et al.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33564474      PMCID: PMC7864763          DOI: 10.1155/2021/8832660

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Care Res Pract        ISSN: 2090-1305


  33 in total

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5.  Ethnic disparities in hospitalisation for COVID-19 in England: The role of socioeconomic factors, mental health, and inflammatory and pro-inflammatory factors in a community-based cohort study.

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10.  Characteristics of and Important Lessons From the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Outbreak in China: Summary of a Report of 72 314 Cases From the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

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4.  Frailty as a mortality predictor in older adults with COVID-19: A systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies.

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5.  Type 2 Diabetes and COVID-19-Related Mortality in the Critical Care Setting: A National Cohort Study in England, March-July 2020.

Authors:  John M Dennis; Bilal A Mateen; Raphael Sonabend; Nicholas J Thomas; Kashyap A Patel; Andrew T Hattersley; Spiros Denaxas; Andrew P McGovern; Sebastian J Vollmer
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