| Literature DB >> 34986787 |
Björn Koos1, Hartmuth Nowak2, Matthias Unterberg2, Tim Rahmel2, Katharina Rump2, Alexander Wolf2, Helge Haberl2, Alexander von Busch2, Lars Bergmann2, Thilo Bracht2,3, Alexander Zarbock4, Stefan Felix Ehrentraut5, Christian Putensen5, Frank Wappler6, Thomas Köhler7, Björn Ellger8,9, Nina Babel10, Ulrich Frey11, Martin Eisenacher3, Daniel Kleefisch3, Katrin Marcus3, Barbara Sitek2,3, Michael Adamzik2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has taken a toll on health care systems worldwide, which has led to increased mortality of different diseases like myocardial infarction. This is most likely due to three factors. First, an increased workload per nurse ratio, a factor associated with mortality. Second, patients presenting with COVID-19-like symptoms are isolated, which also decreases survival in cases of emergency. And third, patients hesitate to see a doctor or present themselves at a hospital. To assess if this is also true for sepsis patients, we asked whether non-COVID-19 sepsis patients had an increased 30-day mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: 30-day mortality; COVID-19 pandemic; Sepsis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34986787 PMCID: PMC8728709 DOI: 10.1186/s12871-021-01547-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Anesthesiol ISSN: 1471-2253 Impact factor: 2.217
Fig. 1Flow chart for identification of the cohort for the final analysis. Four hundred forty-six septic patients were recruited to the SepsisDataNet.NRW study by December 2020. Of these 60 patients were excluded due to missing data. Of the remaining 386 patients, 72 were excluded due to incomplete 30-day survival status. Another 14 patients were excluded from analysis because of a COVID-19 diagnosis and the remaining 300 patients were included in the final analysis
Fig. 2Kaplan Meier analysis considering the 30-day survival of sepsis patients recruited before March 2020 (pre-pandemic, blue) and after March 2020 (pandemic, red). A: In an unbiased analysis a clear difference between the groups can be seen (p = 0.004). B: When adjusted for the higher SOFA score during the pandemic, there is no significant difference between the two groups (p = 0.798)
Base characteristics of the patient cohort recruited pre-pandemic vs. the patient cohort recruited during the pandemic. A value for p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant
| Pre-Pandemic | Pandemic | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 258 | 42 | ||
| 159 (62%) | 26 (62%) | ||
| 64 (14) | 65 (16) | ||
| 8 [5–11] | 10 [8–13] | ||
| 38 [28–48] | 39 [28–50] | ||
| 175/203 (86%) | 32/33 (97%) | ||
| | 3/215 (1%) | 2/33 (6%) | |
| | 101/215 (47%) | 15/33 (45%) | |
| | 14/215 (7%) | 0/33 (0%) | n.a. |
| | 17/215 (8%) | 2/33 (6%) | |
| | 11/215 (5%) | 2/33 (6%) | |
| | 58/215 (27%) | 10/33 (30%) | |
| | 11/215 (5%) | 2/33 (6%) | |
| 7.7 [1.7–13.7] | 10.8 [0.3–21.3] | ||
| 86 (33%) | 22 (52%) | ||
| | 18 (100) | 4 (5) | |
| | 958 (2078) | 2015 (2987) | |
| | 69 (237) | 62 (225) | |
| | 4 (25) | 12 (13) | |
Base characteristics of the matched pairs cohorts. For each patient recruited during the pandemic a propensity score matched patient recruited in the pre-pandemic period was selectd. A value for p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant
| Pre-Pandemic | Pandemic | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 42 | 42 | ||
| 28 (67%) | 26 (62%) | ||
| 66 (13) | 65 (16) | ||
| 11 [8–14] | 11 [10–12] | ||
| 40 [33–47] | 39 [28–50] | ||
| 34/35 (97%) | 40/42 (95%) | ||
| | 1/38 (3%) | 2/33 (6%) | |
| | 20/38 (53%) | 15/33 (45%) | |
| | 2/38 (5%) | 0/33 (0%) | n.a. |
| | 3/38 (8%) | 2/33 (6%) | |
| | 2/38 (5%) | 2/33 (6%) | |
| | 8/38 (21%) | 10/33 (30%) | |
| | 2/38 (5%) | 2/33 (6%) | p = 0.884 |
| | 9.0 [1.9–16.1] | 10.8 [0.3–21.3] | |
| | 23 (55%) | 22 (52%) | p = 0.937 |
| | 32 (144) | 4 (5) | |
| | 1758 (3194) | 2015 (2987) | |
| | 115 (257) | 62 (225) | |
| | 17 (58) | 12 (13) | |