Abstract
COVID-19 is a rapidly disseminating infectious disease conferred by the World Health Organization (WHO) as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Epidemiological and clinical characteristics data have been identified for patients with COVID-19, but mortality-related risk factors and a comprehensive clinical course of disease in a developing country have not been specifically defined. This retrospective, single-center cohort study involved all successive inpatients having a positive COVID-19 polymerase chain reaction (PCR), with deceased or discharged clinical outcomes from 1 January to 10 May 2021. Data were extracted from electronic medical records on demographic, clinical, radiological, and laboratory findings as well as complications faced and treatment provided during follow-up, involving serial samples for viral RNA identification, and compared between the dead and survivors. To investigate the risk factors associated with in-hospital mortality, we employed the multivariate logistic regression model. In this study, 2048 patients were involved, 1458 of whom were discharged, and 590 died in hospital. More than half of patients were identified as male with old age being the potential risk factor of mortality. Exactly 94.8% of all patients presented with fever at the time of admission. Several comorbidities were present in the study population, with the most frequent comorbidity being cardiovascular diseases (1177 of 2048) and hypertension (975 of 2048) followed by cerebrovascular disease and diabetes mellitus. Mortality rates for infected patients were observed as higher in severe patients (46.3%) compared with non-severe cases (26.1%) during a follow-up. Multivariate regression analysis showed a significant association of in-hospital mortality of patients with older age, presence of hypertension and cardiovascular diseases as underlying comorbidities, increased level of cardiac troponin I and d-dimer concentration on admission, as well as septicemia and ARDS as a complication during illness. To minimize the risk of death in COVID19 patients, as well as the risk of severe complications, urgent public health measures should be properly planned and implemented on those vulnerable populations. To detect early manifestations of clinical problems, thorough and regular follow-up is warranted.
Highlights
The possible risk factors associated with in-hospital death have been demonstrated for a deeper understanding
This investigation is principally significant for policymakers and health practitioners to better understand the mortality-related risk factors of COVID-19 patients
We found that older age was a potential factor for a higher risk of mortality in infected cases, whereas the presence of hypertension and cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) as underlying comorbidities have a significant impact on increased mortality of COVID-19 patients
Summary
There have been tens of thousands of newly infectious patients, and thousands of deaths were registered every single day [3,4]. It all began in Wuhan, China, spread exponentially across the globe. COVID-19 is triggered by SARS-CoV-2, which is genetically widely divergent enough from the strongly connected SARS-CoV to be deemed a novel human-infecting beta coronavirus. It primarily affects the respiratory system, and the severity varies from asymptomatic or moderate to serious to critical illness. Even though the present estimation of the case fatality rate of COVID-19 is lower than 5%, up to 15–18% of patients might get severe or critical illnesses, some of them requiring ICU care and mechanical ventilation
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