Literature DB >> 33851193

Social and Clinical Determinants of COVID-19 Outcomes: Modeling Real-World Data from a Pandemic Epicenter.

Jyothi Manohar, Sajjad Abedian, Rachel Martini, Scott Kulm, Mirella Salvatore, Kaylee Ho, Paul Christos, Thomas Campion, Julianne Imperato-McGinley, Said Ibrahim, Teresa H Evering, Erica Phillips, Rulla Tamimi, Vivian Bea, Onyinye D Balogun, Andrea Sboner, Olivier Elemento, Melissa Boneta Davis.   

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: As the United States continues to accumulate COVID-19 cases and deaths, and disparities persist, defining the impact of risk factors for poor outcomes across patient groups is imperative.
OBJECTIVE: Our objective is to use real-world healthcare data to quantify the impact of demographic, clinical, and social determinants associated with adverse COVID-19 outcomes, to identify high-risk scenarios and dynamics of risk among racial and ethnic groups.
DESIGN: A retrospective cohort of COVID-19 patients diagnosed between March 1 and August 20, 2020. Fully adjusted logistical regression models for hospitalization, severe disease and mortality outcomes across 1-the entire cohort and 2-within self-reported race/ethnicity groups.
SETTING: Three sites of the NewYork-Presbyterian health care system serving all boroughs of New York City. Data was obtained through automated data abstraction from electronic medical records. PARTICIPANTS: During the study timeframe, 110,498 individuals were tested for SARS-CoV-2 in the NewYork-Presbyterian health care system; 11,930 patients were confirmed for COVID-19 by RT-PCR or covid-19 clinical diagnosis. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The predictors of interest were patient race/ethnicity, and covariates included demographics, comorbidities, and census tract neighborhood socio-economic status. The outcomes of interest were COVID-19 hospitalization, severe disease, and death.
RESULTS: Of confirmed COVID-19 patients, 4,895 were hospitalized, 1,070 developed severe disease and 1,654 suffered COVID-19 related death. Clinical factors had stronger impacts than social determinants and several showed race-group specificities, which varied among outcomes. The most significant factors in our all-patients models included: age over 80 (OR=5.78, p= 2.29×10 -24 ) and hypertension (OR=1.89, p=1.26×10 -10 ) having the highest impact on hospitalization, while Type 2 Diabetes was associated with all three outcomes (hospitalization: OR=1.48, p=1.39×10 -04 ; severe disease: OR=1.46, p=4.47×10 -09 ; mortality: OR=1.27, p=0.001). In race-specific models, COPD increased risk of hospitalization only in Non-Hispanics (NH)-Whites (OR=2.70, p=0.009). Obesity (BMI 30+) showed race-specific risk with severe disease NH-Whites (OR=1.48, p=0.038) and NH-Blacks (OR=1.77, p=0.025). For mortality, Cancer was the only risk factor in Hispanics (OR=1.97, p=0.043), and heart failure was only a risk in NH-Asians (OR=2.62, p=0.001). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Comorbidities were more influential on COVID-19 outcomes than social determinants, suggesting clinical factors are more predictive of adverse trajectory than social factors. KEY POINTS: QUESTION: What is the impact of patient self-reported race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and clinical profile on COVID-19 hospitalizations, severity, and mortality?
FINDINGS: In patients diagnosed with COVID-19, being over 50 years of age, having type 2 diabetes and hypertension were the most important risk factors for hospitalization and severe outcomes regardless of patient race or socioeconomic status.MEANING: In this large sample pf patients diagnosed with COVID-19 in New York City, we found that clinical comorbidity, more so than social determinants of health, was associated with important patient outcomes.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33851193      PMCID: PMC8043490          DOI: 10.1101/2021.04.06.21254728

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  medRxiv


  9 in total

1.  The development of a standardized neighborhood deprivation index.

Authors:  Lynne C Messer; Barbara A Laraia; Jay S Kaufman; Janet Eyster; Claudia Holzman; Jennifer Culhane; Irma Elo; Jessica G Burke; Patricia O'Campo
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2006-11       Impact factor: 3.671

2.  Secondary Use of Patients' Electronic Records (SUPER): An Approach for Meeting Specific Data Needs of Clinical and Translational Researchers.

Authors:  Evan T Sholle; Joseph Kabariti; Stephen B Johnson; John P Leonard; Jyotishman Pathak; Vinay I Varughese; Curtis L Cole; Thomas R Campion
Journal:  AMIA Annu Symp Proc       Date:  2018-04-16

3.  Characterization and clinical course of 1000 patients with coronavirus disease 2019 in New York: retrospective case series.

Authors:  Michael G Argenziano; Samuel L Bruce; Cody L Slater; Jonathan R Tiao; Matthew R Baldwin; R Graham Barr; Bernard P Chang; Katherine H Chau; Justin J Choi; Nicholas Gavin; Parag Goyal; Angela M Mills; Ashmi A Patel; Marie-Laure S Romney; Monika M Safford; Neil W Schluger; Soumitra Sengupta; Magdalena E Sobieszczyk; Jason E Zucker; Paul A Asadourian; Fletcher M Bell; Rebekah Boyd; Matthew F Cohen; MacAlistair I Colquhoun; Lucy A Colville; Joseph H de Jonge; Lyle B Dershowitz; Shirin A Dey; Katherine A Eiseman; Zachary P Girvin; Daniella T Goni; Amro A Harb; Nicholas Herzik; Sarah Householder; Lara E Karaaslan; Heather Lee; Evan Lieberman; Andrew Ling; Ree Lu; Arthur Y Shou; Alexander C Sisti; Zachary E Snow; Colin P Sperring; Yuqing Xiong; Henry W Zhou; Karthik Natarajan; George Hripcsak; Ruijun Chen
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2020-05-29

4.  Assessment of Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Hospitalization and Mortality in Patients With COVID-19 in New York City.

Authors:  Gbenga Ogedegbe; Joseph Ravenell; Samrachana Adhikari; Mark Butler; Tiffany Cook; Fritz Francois; Eduardo Iturrate; Girardin Jean-Louis; Simon A Jones; Deborah Onakomaiya; Christopher M Petrilli; Claudia Pulgarin; Seann Regan; Harmony Reynolds; Azizi Seixas; Frank Michael Volpicelli; Leora Idit Horwitz
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2020-12-01

5.  Variation in COVID-19 Diagnosis by Zip Code and Race and Ethnicity in Indiana.

Authors:  Amy E Hanson; David S Hains; Andrew L Schwaderer; Michelle C Starr
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2020-12-11

6.  Revealing the Unequal Burden of COVID-19 by Income, Race/Ethnicity, and Household Crowding: US County Versus Zip Code Analyses.

Authors:  Jarvis T Chen; Nancy Krieger
Journal:  J Public Health Manag Pract       Date:  2021 Jan/Feb

7.  Association of Race and Ethnicity With Comorbidities and Survival Among Patients With COVID-19 at an Urban Medical Center in New York.

Authors:  Rafi Kabarriti; N Patrik Brodin; Maxim I Maron; Chandan Guha; Shalom Kalnicki; Madhur K Garg; Andrew D Racine
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2020-09-01

8.  Racial Disparities in Incidence and Outcomes Among Patients With COVID-19.

Authors:  L Silvia Muñoz-Price; Ann B Nattinger; Frida Rivera; Ryan Hanson; Cameron G Gmehlin; Adriana Perez; Siddhartha Singh; Blake W Buchan; Nathan A Ledeboer; Liliana E Pezzin
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2020-09-01

9.  The Impact of Socioeconomic Status on the Clinical Outcomes of COVID-19; a Retrospective Cohort Study.

Authors:  Christine Little; Mathilda Alsen; Joshua Barlow; Leonard Naymagon; Douglas Tremblay; Eric Genden; Samuel Trosman; Laura Iavicoli; Maaike van Gerwen
Journal:  J Community Health       Date:  2021-01-02
  9 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.