Abstract

10–20% of COVID (Corona Virus Disease)-19 cases proceed to a severe stage, and age and the presence of comorbidity increased the risk of death from COVID-19. The identification of risk factors on progression to the severity stages is essential in providing more efficient and suitable management to COVID-19 patients. However, there is insufficient study on risk factors for severity stages of COVID-19 patients. In this study, 2959 confirmed COVID-19 patients were analyzed while using national data, COVID-19 patients Clinical Epidemiological Information provided from the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency. The epidemiological variable, hospital room, periods from confirmation to release, initial symptom and vital signs, underlying comorbidities, and initial blood variables were used to verify the relation with progression to severity stages of COVID-19 and severe COVID-19. The chi-square test, welch test, multiple regression and logistic regression analysis were performed. The ICU (Intensive Care Unit) admission rate of patients having characteristics, such as older age, male, abnormal BMI (Body Mass Index), high heart rate, high body temperature, fever, cough, sputum, sore throat, rhinorrhea, fatigue, dyspnea, change of consciousness, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, chronic artery disease, chronic kidney disease, cancer, dementia, abnormal hemoglobin, abnormal hematocrit, abnormal lymphocyte, abnormal platelets, and abnormal white blood cell were high. The risk factors for severe COVID-19 were older age, shorter hospitalization, abnormal lymphocyte, abnormal platelets, dyspnea, change of consciousness, and dementia. Whereas, significant predictors for progression to severity stages of COVID-19 were older age, longer period from confirmation to release, higher BMI, higher body temperature, abnormal lymphocyte, abnormal platelets, fever, no sore throat, dyspnea, no headache, COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease), and dementia. Therefore, classifying patients with a high risk of severe stage of COVID-19 and managing patients by considering the risk factors could be helpful in the efficient management of COVID-19 patients.

Highlights

  • Coronavirus has a positive-sense single-stranded RNA genome, and its helical symmetry nucleocapsid is approximately 26–32 kb in size [1,2]

  • The final analysis in this study included 2959 patients who were confirmed to have been released from isolation among patients with COVID-19 confirmed cases

  • Of the 2959 patients analyzed in Korea, 133 patients were admitted in intensive care unit (ICU)

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Summary

Methods

This retrospective cohort study investigated all patients from COVID-19 patients Clinical. Epidemiological Information provided from Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency agreed to the share valuable national data that were related to COVID-19 patients for public health purposes. This data included epidemiological variable, initial symptom and vital signs, underlying comorbidities, initial blood variables, hospital room, periods from confirmation to release, and the severity stage of COVID-19. As of 30 April 2020, patients who were confirmed to have been released from isolation or dead among COVID-19 confirmed patients were targeted.

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