| Literature DB >> 35503027 |
Adam Cuker1, Eric K Tseng2, Robby Nieuwlaat3, Pantep Angchaisuksiri4, Clifton Blair5, Kathryn Dane6, Maria T DeSancho7, David Diuguid8, Daniel O Griffin9,10,11, Susan R Kahn12, Frederikus A Klok13, Alfred Ian Lee14, Ignacio Neumann15, Ashok Pai16, Marc Righini17, Kristen M Sanfilippo18, Deborah M Siegal19, Mike Skara20, Deirdra R Terrell21, Kamshad Touri22, Elie A Akl23, Reyad Al Jabiri24, Yazan Al Jabiri25, Angela M Barbara3, Antonio Bognanni3, Mary Boulos3, Romina Brignardello-Petersen3, Rana Charide26, Luis E Colunga-Lozano27, Karin Dearness28, Andrea J Darzi3, Heba Hussein29, Samer G Karam3, Razan Mansour30, Gian Paolo Morgano3, Rami Z Morsi31, Giovanna Muti-Schünemann3, Menatalla K Nadim32, Binu A Philip3, Yuan Qiu3, Yetiani Roldan Benitez3, Adrienne Stevens3, Karla Solo3, Wojtek Wiercioch3, Reem A Mustafa3,33, Holger J Schünemann3,34.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: COVID-19-related acute illness is associated with an increased risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE).Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35503027 PMCID: PMC9068240 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2022007561
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529
Recommendation
| Recommendation | Remarks |
|---|---|
| • Patients with COVID-19–related acute illness are defined as those with clinical features that would typically result in admission to an inpatient medical ward without requirement for intensive clinical support. Examples include patients with dyspnea or mild-to-moderate hypoxia. | |
Definition of target population
| Target population | Definition |
|---|---|
| Acutely ill | Patients with COVID-19 who require hospital admission, generally to an inpatient medical ward, without intensive clinical support (ie, not to the ICU), but may be treated in other settings if the hospital is over capacity. Hospital capacity and admission criteria may vary according to the specific setting. Some observational studies informing the baseline risk of critical outcomes reported on all patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in aggregate and had fewer than 20% in the ICU without separating their outcomes. Such populations were labeled as acutely ill. |
Decision thresholds per critical outcome
| Outcome | Mean utility value (SD) | Decision thresholds for No. of events per 1000 patients (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trivial/small | Small/moderate | Moderate/large | ||
| Mortality | 0 | 16 (9-22) | 31 (22-39) | 60 (46-73) |
| Moderate PE | 0.42 (0.15) | 27 (15-38) | 53 (38-68) | 103 (80-125) |
| Moderate proximal DVT | 0.58 (0.14) | 37 (21-53) | 73 (53-94) | 142 (110-173) |
| Major bleeding | 0.33 (0.23) | 23 (13-33) | 46 (33-59) | 89 (69-109) |
| Severe ischemic stroke | 0.14 (0.10) | 18 (10-26) | 36 (26-46) | 69 (54-85) |
| Intracranial hemorrhage | 0.12 (0.10) | 18 (10-25) | 35 (25-45) | 68 (53-83) |
| Multiple organ failure | 0.15 (0.14) | 18 (10-26) | 36 (26-46) | 70 (54-86) |
| STEMI | 0.31 (0.19) | 23 (13-32) | 44 (32-57) | 86 (67-105) |
| Limb amputation | 0.26 (0.16) | 21 (12-30) | 41 (30-53) | 80 (63-98) |
| ICU hospitalization | 0.38 (0.16) | 25 (14-36) | 50 (36-63) | 96 (75-117) |
| Long-term invasive ventilation | 0.20 (0.12) | 20 (11-28) | 38 (28-49) | 74 (58-91) |
SD, standard deviation; STEMI, ST-elevation myocardial infarction.
Health utility values indicate how patients would value their health state when experiencing the outcome of interest; 1.00 indicates perfect health and 0 equals death. Values were obtained from 70 panel members from various ASH guidelines related to the management of VTE.
A survey was administered to 151 panel members from various ASH guidelines related to the management of VTE and COVID-19, using various clinical outcome scenarios with standardized outcome descriptors (marker states) to determine thresholds between trivial, small, moderate, and large effects for the different critical outcomes. Mortality was used as the anchor with a utility value of 0, and the thresholds for other outcomes were determined on the basis of their utility value relative to mortality.