Author: Higuchi, Takatoshi; Nishida, Tsutomu; Iwahashi, Hiromi; Morimura, Osamu; Otani, Yasushi; Okauchi, Yukiyoshi; Yokoe, Masaru; Suzuki, Norihiro; Inada, Masami; Abe, Kinya
Title: Early clinical factors predicting the development of critical disease in Japanese patients with COVIDâ€19: A singleâ€center, retrospective, observational study Cord-id: 5ue1byjm Document date: 2020_11_1
ID: 5ue1byjm
Snippet: The factors predicting the progression of coronavirus diseaseâ€2019 (COVIDâ€19) from mild to moderate to critical are unclear. We retrospectively evaluated risk factors for disease progression in Japanese patients with COVIDâ€19. Seventyâ€four patients with laboratoryâ€confirmed COVIDâ€19 were hospitalized in our hospital between February 20, 2020, and June 10, 2020. We excluded asymptomatic, nonâ€Japanese, and pediatric patients. We divided patients into the stable group and the progress
Document: The factors predicting the progression of coronavirus diseaseâ€2019 (COVIDâ€19) from mild to moderate to critical are unclear. We retrospectively evaluated risk factors for disease progression in Japanese patients with COVIDâ€19. Seventyâ€four patients with laboratoryâ€confirmed COVIDâ€19 were hospitalized in our hospital between February 20, 2020, and June 10, 2020. We excluded asymptomatic, nonâ€Japanese, and pediatric patients. We divided patients into the stable group and the progression group (PG; requiring mechanical ventilation). We compared the clinical factors. We established the cutoff values (COVs) for significantly different factors via receiver operating characteristic curve analysis and identified risk factors by univariate regression. We enrolled 57 patients with COVIDâ€19 (median age 52 years, 56.1% male). The median time from symptom onset to admission was 8 days. Seven patients developed critical disease (PG: 12.2%), two (3.5%) of whom died; 50 had stable disease. Univariate logistic analysis identified an elevated lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) level (COV: 309 U/l), a decreased estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR; COV: 68 ml/min), lymphocytopenia (COV: 980/μl), and statin use as significantly associated with disease progression. However, in the Cox proportional hazards analysis, lymphocytopenia at admission was not significant. We identified three candidate risk factors for progression to critical COVIDâ€19 in adult Japanese patients: statin use, elevated LDH level, and decreased eGFR.
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