Recently the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak has been declared a pandemic. Despite its aggressive extension and significant morbidity and mortality, risk factors are poorly characterized outside China. We designed a registry, HOPE COVID-19 (NCT04334291), assessing data of 1021 patients discharged (dead or alive) after COVID-19, from 23 hospitals in 4 countries, between 8 February and 1 April. The primary end-point was all-cause mortality aiming to produce a mortality risk score calculator. The median age was 68 years (IQR 52–79), and 59.5% were male. Most frequent comorbidities were hypertension (46.8%) and dyslipidemia (35.8%). A relevant heart or lung disease were depicted in 20%. And renal, neurological, or oncological disease, respectively, were detected in nearly 10%. Most common symptoms were fever, cough, and dyspnea at admission. 311 patients died and 710 were discharged alive. In the death-multivariate analysis, raised as most relevant: age, hypertension, obesity, renal insufficiency, any immunosuppressive disease, 02 saturation < 92% and an elevated C reactive protein (AUC = 0.87; Hosmer–Lemeshow test, p > 0.999; bootstrap-optimist: 0.0018). We provide a simple clinical score to estimate probability of death, dividing patients in four grades (I–IV) of increasing probability. Hydroxychloroquine (79.2%) and antivirals (67.6%) were the specific drugs most commonly used. After a propensity score adjustment, the results suggested a slight improvement in mortality rates (adjusted-ORhydroxychloroquine 0.88; 95% CI 0.81–0.91, p = 0.005; adjusted-ORantiviral 0.94; 95% CI 0.87–1.01; p = 0.115). COVID-19 produces important mortality, mostly in patients with comorbidities with respiratory symptoms. Hydroxychloroquine could be associated with survival benefit, but this data need to be confirmed with further trials. Trial Registration: NCT04334291/EUPAS34399.

Mortality risk assessment in Spain and Italy, insights of the HOPE COVID-19 registry / I.J. Nunez-Gil, C. Fernandez-Perez, V. Estrada, V.M. Becerra-Munoz, I. El-Battrawy, A. Uribarri, I. Fernandez-Rozas, G. Feltes, M.C. Viana-Llamas, D. Trabattoni, J. Lopez-Pais, M. Pepe, R. Romero, A.F. Castro-Mejia, E. Cerrato, T.C. Astrua, F. D'Ascenzo, O. Fabregat-Andres, J. Moreu, F. Guerra, J. Signes-Costa, F. Marin, D. Buosenso, A. Bardaji, S. Raposeiras-Roubin, J. Elola, A. Molino, J.J. Gomez-Doblas, M. Abumayyaleh, A. Aparisi, M. Molina, A. Guerri, R. Arroyo-Espliguero, E. Assanelli, M. Mapelli, J.M. Garcia-Acuna, G. Brindicci, E. Manzone, M.E. Ortega-Armas, M. Bianco, C.P. Trung, M.J. Nunez, C. Castellanos-Lluch, E. Garcia-Vazquez, N. Cabello-Clotet, K. Jamhour-Chelh, M.J. Tellez, A. Fernandez-Ortiz, C. Macaya. - In: INTERNAL AND EMERGENCY MEDICINE. - ISSN 1828-0447. - (2020). [Epub ahead of print] [10.1007/s11739-020-02543-5]

Mortality risk assessment in Spain and Italy, insights of the HOPE COVID-19 registry

M. Mapelli;
2020

Abstract

Recently the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak has been declared a pandemic. Despite its aggressive extension and significant morbidity and mortality, risk factors are poorly characterized outside China. We designed a registry, HOPE COVID-19 (NCT04334291), assessing data of 1021 patients discharged (dead or alive) after COVID-19, from 23 hospitals in 4 countries, between 8 February and 1 April. The primary end-point was all-cause mortality aiming to produce a mortality risk score calculator. The median age was 68 years (IQR 52–79), and 59.5% were male. Most frequent comorbidities were hypertension (46.8%) and dyslipidemia (35.8%). A relevant heart or lung disease were depicted in 20%. And renal, neurological, or oncological disease, respectively, were detected in nearly 10%. Most common symptoms were fever, cough, and dyspnea at admission. 311 patients died and 710 were discharged alive. In the death-multivariate analysis, raised as most relevant: age, hypertension, obesity, renal insufficiency, any immunosuppressive disease, 02 saturation < 92% and an elevated C reactive protein (AUC = 0.87; Hosmer–Lemeshow test, p > 0.999; bootstrap-optimist: 0.0018). We provide a simple clinical score to estimate probability of death, dividing patients in four grades (I–IV) of increasing probability. Hydroxychloroquine (79.2%) and antivirals (67.6%) were the specific drugs most commonly used. After a propensity score adjustment, the results suggested a slight improvement in mortality rates (adjusted-ORhydroxychloroquine 0.88; 95% CI 0.81–0.91, p = 0.005; adjusted-ORantiviral 0.94; 95% CI 0.87–1.01; p = 0.115). COVID-19 produces important mortality, mostly in patients with comorbidities with respiratory symptoms. Hydroxychloroquine could be associated with survival benefit, but this data need to be confirmed with further trials. Trial Registration: NCT04334291/EUPAS34399.
English
COVID-19; Mortality; Prognosis; Registry; Score
Settore MED/11 - Malattie dell'Apparato Cardiovascolare
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2020
nov-2020
Springer
10
Epub ahead of print
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
pubmed
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Mortality risk assessment in Spain and Italy, insights of the HOPE COVID-19 registry / I.J. Nunez-Gil, C. Fernandez-Perez, V. Estrada, V.M. Becerra-Munoz, I. El-Battrawy, A. Uribarri, I. Fernandez-Rozas, G. Feltes, M.C. Viana-Llamas, D. Trabattoni, J. Lopez-Pais, M. Pepe, R. Romero, A.F. Castro-Mejia, E. Cerrato, T.C. Astrua, F. D'Ascenzo, O. Fabregat-Andres, J. Moreu, F. Guerra, J. Signes-Costa, F. Marin, D. Buosenso, A. Bardaji, S. Raposeiras-Roubin, J. Elola, A. Molino, J.J. Gomez-Doblas, M. Abumayyaleh, A. Aparisi, M. Molina, A. Guerri, R. Arroyo-Espliguero, E. Assanelli, M. Mapelli, J.M. Garcia-Acuna, G. Brindicci, E. Manzone, M.E. Ortega-Armas, M. Bianco, C.P. Trung, M.J. Nunez, C. Castellanos-Lluch, E. Garcia-Vazquez, N. Cabello-Clotet, K. Jamhour-Chelh, M.J. Tellez, A. Fernandez-Ortiz, C. Macaya. - In: INTERNAL AND EMERGENCY MEDICINE. - ISSN 1828-0447. - (2020). [Epub ahead of print] [10.1007/s11739-020-02543-5]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
49
262
Article (author)
no
I.J. Nunez-Gil, C. Fernandez-Perez, V. Estrada, V.M. Becerra-Munoz, I. El-Battrawy, A. Uribarri, I. Fernandez-Rozas, G. Feltes, M.C. Viana-Llamas, D. Trabattoni, J. Lopez-Pais, M. Pepe, R. Romero, A.F. Castro-Mejia, E. Cerrato, T.C. Astrua, F. D'Ascenzo, O. Fabregat-Andres, J. Moreu, F. Guerra, J. Signes-Costa, F. Marin, D. Buosenso, A. Bardaji, S. Raposeiras-Roubin, J. Elola, A. Molino, J.J. Gomez-Doblas, M. Abumayyaleh, A. Aparisi, M. Molina, A. Guerri, R. Arroyo-Espliguero, E. Assanelli, M. Mapelli, J.M. Garcia-Acuna, G. Brindicci, E. Manzone, M.E. Ortega-Armas, M. Bianco, C.P. Trung, M.J. Nunez, C. Castellanos-Lluch, E. Garcia-Vazquez, N. Cabello-Clotet, K. Jamhour-Chelh, M.J. Tellez, A. Fernandez-Ortiz, C. Macaya
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/789613
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