Abstract

Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) has challenged the health system worldwide, including the low and middle income countries like Nepal. In view of the rising number of infections and prediction of multiple waves of this disease, mortalities due to COVID-19 need to be critically analyzed so that every possible effort could be made to prevent COVID-19 related mortalities in future. Main aim of this research was to study about the mortalities due to COVID-19 at a tertiary level hospital, in Nepal. This was a retrospective, observational study that included all inpatients from Sukraraj Tropical and Infectious Disease Hospital, who were reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction positive for SARS-COV-2 and died during hospital stay from January 2020 till January 2021. Medical records of the patients were evaluated. Out of 860 total admissions in a year, there were 50 mortalities in the study center. Out of 50 mortalities, majority were males (76%) with male to female ratio of 3.17:1. Most were above 65 years of age (72%) and had two or more comorbidities (64%). The most common comorbidities among the patients who had died during hospital stay were hypertension (58%) followed by diabetes mellitus (50%) and chronic obstructive airway disease (24%). The median duration from the symptom onset to death was 18 days, ranged from the minimum of 2 days till maximum of 39 days. D-dimer was found to be >1 mg/L in 58% cases and ferritin was >500 ng/ml in 42% patients at presentation. A total of 42% patients had thrombocytopenia, 80% patients had lymphocytopenia and 60% had Neutrophil to Lymphocyte ratio >11.75 with the mean NLR of 18.38. Of total mortalities, 16% patients also showed microbiological evidence of secondary infection; Male gender, age more than 65 years, multiple comorbidities with lymphocytopenia, elevated Neutrophil lymphocyte ratio and elevated inflammatory markers were risk factors found in majority of mortalities in our study. These findings could be utilized for early triage and risk assessment in COVID-19 patients so that aggressive treatment strategies could be employed at the earliest to reduce mortalities due to COVID-19 in future.

Highlights

  • Cases of pneumonia with unknown cause emerged in Wuhan, China, in December2019 [1]

  • This study describes the demographic characteristics of COVID-19 mortalities in Sukraraj Tropical and Infectious Disease Hospital (STIDH) and observation of risk factors that contributed to mortality

  • The current study suggested that old age was associated with deaths in patients with mortality in COVID-19 [10]

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Summary

Introduction

Cases of pneumonia with unknown cause emerged in Wuhan, China, in December. Epidemic investigation and gene sequencing revealed that a novel corona virus was the etiologic agent. The virus was tentatively named 2019-nCoV but officially named severe acute respiratory syndrome corona virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) later by the Coronavirus. Study Group of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses and the disease caused by this virus was named as COVID-19 by the World Health Organization [2,3]. As of 7 July 2021, there have been 184,324,026 confirmed cases of COVID-19, including 3,992,680 deaths, reported to WHO [4]. It has been one year since Nepal reported its first COVID-19 patient. Sukraraj Tropical and Infectious Disease Hospital (STIDH), the only central government infectious disease hospital of Nepal, was the first to diagnose and treat the first-ever patient infected with

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