有浸润性癌症史的纽约州居民中早期COVID-19住院

Q4 Medicine
Journal of registry management Pub Date : 2022-01-01
Xiuling Zhang, Margaret Gates Kuliszewski, Amy R Kahn, Maria J Schymura
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:由于免疫抑制、合并症或持续治疗,有癌症病史的个体可能更容易感染严重的COVID-19。我们将COVID-19住院的住院索赔数据与纽约州癌症登记处(NYSCR)的癌症诊断相关联,以检查先前的癌症诊断与COVID-19住院之间的关系,以及与COVID-19住院后出院时死亡相关的因素。方法:从NYSCR数据中确定2021年7月1日之前诊断为浸润性癌症的纽约州(NYS)居民,这些居民在2020年1月1日还活着。我们从纽约州的全州规划和研究合作系统(SPARCS)中获得了2020年和2021年上半年的出院索赔数据,并使用确定性匹配方法将与COVID-19相关的住院记录作为主要诊断与纽约scr的癌症数据联系起来。我们计算描述性统计并进行多变量调整logistic回归分析,以检验癌症病例特征与COVID-19住院和癌症病史患者出院时生命体征的相关性。所有分析均在SAS 9.4中进行。结果:我们的分析包括1,257,377名有癌症病史的人,其中10,210人随后因COVID-19住院。在调整年龄和性别后,与纽约州普通人群相比,有癌症病史的个体因COVID-19住院的可能性高出16% (95% CI, 14%-19%)。与癌症患者中COVID-19住院独立相关的因素包括年龄较大、男性、非西班牙裔黑人或西班牙裔、诊断为晚期癌症或多发性肿瘤、最近的癌症诊断以及癌症诊断时居住在纽约市(NYC)。与COVID-19住院患者和既往癌症诊断患者出院时死亡独立相关的因素包括:年龄较大、男性、非西班牙裔黑人或非西班牙裔亚裔/太平洋岛民种族或西班牙裔、COVID-19住院时居住在纽约市,以及COVID-19住院时的有效癌症诊断索赔代码。结论:这项基于索赔的研究发现,在有癌症病史的个体中,特别是某些人口统计学和诊断组的个体,COVID-19住院和出院时死亡的风险更高。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Early COVID-19 Hospitalizations Among New York State Residents with a History of Invasive Cancer.

Early COVID-19 Hospitalizations Among New York State Residents with a History of Invasive Cancer.

Background: Individuals with a history of cancer may be more susceptible to severe COVID-19 due to immunosuppression, comorbidities, or ongoing treatment. We linked inpatient claims data on COVID-19 hospitalizations to cancer diagnoses from the New York State Cancer Registry (NYSCR) to examine associations between prior cancer diagnoses and hospitalizations for COVID-19, and factors associated with death at discharge after COVID-19 hospitalization.

Methods: New York State (NYS) residents diagnosed with invasive cancer before July 1, 2021, who were alive on January 1, 2020, were identified from NYSCR data. We obtained claims data for discharge year 2020 and the first half of 2021 from NYS's Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS), and we linked inpatient records with COVID-19 as the primary diagnosis to cancer data from the NYSCR using deterministic matching methods. We calculated descriptive statistics and conducted multivariable-adjusted logistic regression analyses to examine associations of cancer case characteristics with COVID-19 hospitalization and with vital status at discharge among patients with a history of cancer. All analyses were conducted in SAS 9.4.

Results: Our analysis included 1,257,377 individuals with a history of cancer, 10,210 of whom had a subsequent primary COVID-19 hospitalization. Individuals with a history of cancer were 16% more likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19, compared to the general population of NYS, after adjusting for age and sex (95% CI, 14%-19%). Factors independently associated with COVID-19 hospitalization among cancer patients included older age, male sex, non-Hispanic Black race or Hispanic ethnicity, diagnosis with late-stage cancer or with multiple tumors, more recent cancer diagnosis, and New York City (NYC) residency at the time of cancer diagnosis. Factors independently associated with death at discharge among individuals with COVID-19 hospitalization and a prior cancer diagnosis included older age, male sex, non-Hispanic Black or non-Hispanic Asian/Pacific Islander race or Hispanic ethnicity, residence in NYC at the time of COVID-19 hospitalization, and an active cancer diagnosis claim code at the time of COVID-19 hospitalization.

Conclusion: This claims-based study identified higher risks of COVID-19 hospitalization and death at discharge among individuals with a history of cancer, and particularly those in certain demographic and diagnostic groups.

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Journal of registry management
Journal of registry management Medicine-Medicine (all)
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