Demographic and Clinical Presentation of Hospitalised Patients with SARS-CoV-2 During the First Omicron Wave

M. Patel, E. Aitken
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Abstract

Introduction: The objectives of this retrospective study were to describe clinical presentations and mortality outcomes of hospitalised patients with the COVID-19 Omicron variant within two acute district general hospitals, and to evaluate demographic factors associated with these presentations and mortality. Methods: Data was obtained over a month in 2021–2022 from multi-ethnic patients who were hospitalised and detected to have severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 Omicron infection. Details included socio-demographic characteristics, vaccination, and mortality. Patients were subdivided into three groups: Group 1 were admitted with true COVID-19 pneumonitis, Group 2 had incidental COVID-19 on admission screening, and Group 3 were negative on admission but developed COVID-19 over 7 days post-admission. Results: Of 553 patients, only 24.1% (133/553) were in Group 1, 58.2% (322/553) in Group 2, and 17.7% (98/553) in Group 3. Patients in Group 1 and Group 3 were significantly older than those in Group 2 (p<0.001). Thirty percent of patients from Black, Asian, and minority ethnic backgrounds had COVID-19 pneumonitis compared with 19% of those with White ethnicity (p=0.002). Twenty percent of patients were admitted within nonmedical specialties, i.e., surgical specialties, paediatrics, and obstetrics. Of 36 requiring critical care, 21 were in Group 1. Of those patients, 20/21 (95%) were unvaccinated and seven of the 21 who died were all unvaccinated (100%). Common COVID-19 presentations included delirium, falls, seizures, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and antenatal problems. Overall, 13.7% (76/553) patients died and 4.7% (26/553) were directly attributable to COVID-19. Conclusions: This large, multi-ethnic study has described clinical presentations and mortality of hospitalised patients with Omicron. It has determined socio-demographic factors associated with these presentations, including ethnicity and vaccination rates. The study provides useful information for future COVID-19 studies examining outcomes and presentations of Omicron and future COVID-19 variants.
SARS-CoV-2住院患者在第一次欧米克隆波期间的人口学和临床表现
本回顾性研究的目的是描述两家急性区综合医院的COVID-19欧米克隆变异住院患者的临床表现和死亡率结果,并评估与这些表现和死亡率相关的人口统计学因素。方法:收集2021-2022年1个月多民族住院且检测出严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2型欧米克隆感染的患者资料。细节包括社会人口统计学特征、疫苗接种和死亡率。将患者细分为3组:1组入院时为真性COVID-19肺炎,2组入院时为偶发COVID-19, 3组入院时阴性,但在入院后7天内出现COVID-19。结果:553例患者中,1组占24.1%(133/553),2组占58.2%(322/553),3组占17.7%(98/553)。1、3组患者年龄明显大于2组(p<0.001)。30%的黑人、亚洲人和少数族裔背景的患者患有COVID-19肺炎,而白人的这一比例为19% (p=0.002)。20%的患者在非医学专业,即外科专业,儿科和产科入院。36例需要重症监护的患者中,第1组21例。在这些患者中,20/21(95%)未接种疫苗,21名死亡患者中有7人未接种疫苗(100%)。常见的COVID-19症状包括谵妄、跌倒、癫痫发作、慢性阻塞性肺病和产前问题。总体而言,13.7%(76/553)的患者死亡,4.7%(26/553)的患者直接归因于COVID-19。结论:这项大型、多民族的研究描述了Omicron住院患者的临床表现和死亡率。它确定了与这些表现有关的社会人口因素,包括种族和疫苗接种率。该研究为未来的COVID-19研究提供了有用的信息,这些研究检查了Omicron和未来的COVID-19变体的结果和表现。
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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