Author: Iyengar, A.; Han, J. J.; Helmers, M. R.; Smood, B. F.; Patrick, W. L.; Kelly, J.; Moss, N.; Najjar, S. S.; Houston, B. A.; Tedford, R. J.; Shore, S.; Vorovich, E.; Hsich, E.; Alexander, K. M.; Chaudhry, S.; Vidula, H.; Kilic, A.; Genuardi, M. V.; Birati, E. Y.; Atluri, P.
Title: The Effect of Body Mass Index on Presentation of COVID-19 amongst Heart Transplant Recipients: A Multi-Institutional Study Cord-id: w5t8i4lv Document date: 2021_4_30
ID: w5t8i4lv
Snippet: Purpose Characteristics and outcomes of heart transplant (HT) recipients who contract coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) have been poorly described. The current study was undertaken to better understand the risk obesity may pose in this patient population Methods A prospectively-maintained Trans-CoV-VAD Registry containing HT recipients at 11 participating institutions who presented with SARS-CoV-2 were reviewed. Presenting characteristics, hospitalization rates, ventilator & intensive care unit usage, an
Document: Purpose Characteristics and outcomes of heart transplant (HT) recipients who contract coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) have been poorly described. The current study was undertaken to better understand the risk obesity may pose in this patient population Methods A prospectively-maintained Trans-CoV-VAD Registry containing HT recipients at 11 participating institutions who presented with SARS-CoV-2 were reviewed. Presenting characteristics, hospitalization rates, ventilator & intensive care unit usage, and mortality were queried. Patients were grouped by body mass index (BMI) into obese (BMI≥30 k/m2) and non-obese cohorts (BMI<30 kg/m2). Comparisons between groups were made utilizing chi-squared, Fisher's exact, and Mann-Whitney U-tests. Multivariable logistic regression models were utilized Results Across all centers, 85 HT recipients who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 were identified, of whom 26 (31%) were obese. Median time from HT to diagnosis was 4.6 (1.8-13.8) years. No differences in age (57 vs 60 p 0.85) or female gender (31% vs 24% p 0.5) were noted between obese and non-obese patients. On presentation, obese patients were more symptomatic with higher rates of cough (76% vs 48% p 0.02), dyspnea (62% vs 41% p 0.09), diarrhea (60% vs 35% p 0.03), and headache (35% vs 14% p 0.03). No differences in rates of admission (62% vs 64% p 0.8), ICU presentation (44% vs 35% p 0.6) or need for mechanical ventilation were noted (38% vs 22% p 0.2). More secondary infections were noted amongst obese patients (32% vs 13% p 0.04). On follow-up, mortality was similar between groups (12% vs 9% p 0.7). On multivariable modeling, BMI was not associated with increased adjusted odds of hospital/ICU admission or mechanical ventilation (p>0.10) Conclusion Acute presentations of SARS-CoV-2 amongst HT recipients carry significantly higher mortality over the general population. Obesity appears to impact presenting symptoms and secondary infections, but does not strongly impact ICU requirements or mortality
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents- acute care system and lockdown period: 1
- acute care system and low incidence: 1
- lockdown period and low incidence: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date