Selected article for: "current evidence and mortality rate"

Author: Chen, Chun-Yu; Shao, Shih-Chieh; Chen, Yih-Ting; Hsu, Cheng-Kai; Hsu, Heng-Jung; Lee, Chin-Chan; Sun, Chiao-Yin; Chen, Yung-Chan; Hung, Ming-Jui; Wu, I-Wen
Title: Incidence and Clinical Impacts of COVID-19 Infection in Patients with Hemodialysis: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of 396,062 Hemodialysis Patients
  • Cord-id: 2hbf8rfv
  • Document date: 2021_1_5
  • ID: 2hbf8rfv
    Snippet: Hemodialysis (HD) patients are highly susceptible to COVID-19 infection. However, comprehensive assessments of current evidence regarding COVID-19 in HD patients remain incomplete. We systematically searched PUBMED and EMBASE for articles published on incidence or mortality of COVID-19 infection in HD patients until September 2020. Two independent researchers extracted data and study-level risk of bias across studies. We conducted meta-analysis of proportions for incidence and mortality rate. St
    Document: Hemodialysis (HD) patients are highly susceptible to COVID-19 infection. However, comprehensive assessments of current evidence regarding COVID-19 in HD patients remain incomplete. We systematically searched PUBMED and EMBASE for articles published on incidence or mortality of COVID-19 infection in HD patients until September 2020. Two independent researchers extracted data and study-level risk of bias across studies. We conducted meta-analysis of proportions for incidence and mortality rate. Study heterogeneity and publication bias were assessed. A total of 29 articles with 3261 confirmed COVID-19 cases from a pool of 396,062 HD patients were identified. Incidence of COVID-19 in these HD patients was 7.7% (95% CI: 5.0–10.9%; study heterogeneity: I2 = 99.7%, p < 0.001; risk of publication bias, Egger’s test, p < 0.001). Overall mortality rate was 22.4% (95% CI: 17.9–27.1%; study heterogeneity: I2 = 87.1%, p < 0.001; risk of publication bias, Egger’s test: p = 0.197) in HD patients with COVID-19. Reported estimates were higher in non-Asian than Asian countries. Quality of study may affect the reported incidence but not the mortality among studies. Both incidence and mortality of COVID-19 infection were higher in HD patients. Available data may underestimate the real incidence of infection. International collaboration and standardized reporting of epidemiological data should be needed for further studies.

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