A Large Postmortem Database of COVID-19 Patients Can Inform Disease Research and Public Policy Decision Making.

Jody E Hooper, Harry Sanchez, Silvio Litovsky, Zhen Arthur Lu, Edward W Gabrielson, Robert F Padera, Thora Steffensen, Isaac H Solomon, Andrea Gilbert, Kirsten J Threlkeld, Amy V Rapkiewicz, Holly Harper, Meghan E Kapp, Mary K Schwerdt, Sharon Mount, Yiwen Wang, Rong Lu, Alex K Williamson
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Abstract

Context.—: Autopsies performed on COVID-19 patients have provided critical information about SARS-CoV-2's tropism, mechanisms of tissue injury, and the spectrum of disease.

Objective.—: To provide an updated database of postmortem disease in COVID-19 patients, assess relationships among clinical and pathologic variables, evaluate the accuracy of death certification, and correlate disease variables to causes of death.

Design.—: The 272 postmortem examinations reported in this paper were submitted by 14 pathologists from 9 medical or forensic institutions across the United States. The study spans the eras of the 3 principal COVID-19 strains and incorporates surveyed demographic, clinical, and postmortem data from decedents infected with SARS-CoV-2, including primary and contributing causes of death. It is the largest database of its kind to date.

Results.—: Demographics of the decedents reported here correspond well to national statistics. Primary causes of death as determined by autopsy and official death certificates were significantly correlated. When specifically cited disease conditions found at autopsy were correlated with COVID-19 versus non-COVID-19 death, only lung findings characteristic of SARS-CoV-2 infection or the absence of lung findings were significantly associated.

Conclusions.—: Changes in hospitalization and disease likely stem from longer lifespans after COVID-19 diagnosis and alteration in treatment approaches. Although Omicron variants preferentially replicate in the upper airways, autopsied patients who died of COVID-19 in that time period showed the same lung damage as earlier decedents. Most importantly, findings suggest that there are still unelucidated risk factors for death from COVID-19 including possibly genetic susceptibility.

大型 COVID-19 患者尸检数据库可为疾病研究和公共政策决策提供信息。
背景对 COVID-19 患者进行的尸检提供了有关 SARS-CoV-2 的滋养特性、组织损伤机制和疾病谱的重要信息:提供 COVID-19 患者死后疾病的最新数据库,评估临床和病理变量之间的关系,评估死亡证明的准确性,并将疾病变量与死因联系起来:本文报告的 272 例尸检结果由来自美国 9 家医疗或法医机构的 14 位病理学家提交。这项研究跨越了 COVID-19 3 种主要毒株的年代,并纳入了感染 SARS-CoV-2 的死者的人口、临床和尸检数据,包括主要死因和诱发死因。这是迄今为止同类数据库中最大的一个:这里报告的死者的人口统计学特征与国家统计数据十分吻合。尸检和官方死亡证明确定的主要死因有明显的相关性。如果将尸检时发现的具体疾病情况与 COVID-19 和非 COVID-19 死亡相关联,则只有 SARS-CoV-2 感染的肺部检查结果或无肺部检查结果与 COVID-19 有明显关联:结论:COVID-19 确诊后,患者寿命延长,治疗方法也发生了变化,这可能是住院和疾病发生变化的原因。虽然奥米克龙变异体更倾向于在上呼吸道复制,但在此期间死于 COVID-19 的尸检患者显示出与早期死者相同的肺部损伤。最重要的是,研究结果表明,COVID-19导致死亡的风险因素仍未得到阐明,其中可能包括遗传易感性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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