Abstract

The outbreak of Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) in Wuhan have affected more than 250 countries and regions worldwide. However, most of the clinical studies have been focused on Wuhan, and little is known about the disease outside of Wuhan in China. In this retrospective cohort study, we report the early clinical features of 80 patients with COVID-19 admitted to the hospital in Beijing. The results show that 27 (33.8%) patients had severe illness. Six (7.5%) patients were admitted to the ICU, and 3 (3.8%) patients died. Forty-eight percent (39/80) of the patients had a history of living/traveling in Wuhan. Patients with severe- illness were significantly older (average age, 71 years old vs 44 years old) and had a high incidence of expectoration (59.3% vs 34.0%), shortness of breath (92.6% vs 9.4%), anorexia (51.9% vs 18.9%) and confusion(18.5% vs 0%) compared with nonsevere patients. The systolic blood pressure (median, 130 mmHg vs 120 mmHg) was higher and the oxygen saturation (median, 98.3% vs 92.0%) was significantly lower in severe patients than nonsevere patients. In addition, myoglobin (median, 56.0 ng/mL vs 35.0 ng/mL), troponin I (median, 0.02 pg/mL vs 0.01 pg/mL), C-reactive protein (median, 69.7 mg/L vs 12.9 mg/L) and neutrophils (median, 3.3×109/L vs 2.2×109/L) were significantly increased, while lymphocytes (median, 0.8×109/L vs 1.2×109/L), albumin (mean, 32.8 g/L vs 36.8 g/L) and the creatinine clearance rate (median, 91.2 vs 108.2 ml/min/1.73m2) were significantly decreased among severe patients. Our study revealed that older patients with high levels of C-reactive protein, myoglobin, troponin I, and neutrophil and high systolic blood pressure as well as low levels of lymphocytes, and albumin and a low creatinine clearance rate and oxygen saturation were more likely to have severe disease.

Highlights

  • The outbreak of Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) from Wuhan, China, has affected more than 250 countries and regions worldwide in only two months [1, 2]

  • We report the early clinical features of 80 patients with COVID-19 admitted to the hospital in Beijing

  • The patients were divided into severe patients (n = 27, including 15 patients with severe cases on admission and 12 patients with nonsevere cases that became severe after admission) and nonsevere patients (n = 53, who remained nonsevere)

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Summary

Introduction

The outbreak of Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) from Wuhan, China, has affected more than 250 countries and regions worldwide in only two months [1, 2]. Most clinical studies on COVID-19 have focused on describing the general epidemiologic and clinical characteristics in Wuhan [7,8,9]. We report the early clinical features of 80 patients with COVID-19 admitted to the hospital in Beijing. This will identify the defining clinical characteristics in different places, and reveal the risk factors associated with severe illness

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