Abstract

Almost 200,000 deaths from COVID-19 were reported in Brazil in 2020. The case fatality rate of a new infectious disease can vary by different risk factors and over time. We analysed the trends and associated factors of COVID-19 case fatality rates in Brazilian public hospital admissions during the first wave of the pandemic. A retrospective cohort of all COVID-19-related admissions between epidemiological weeks 10-40 in the Brazilian Public Health System (SUS) was delimited from available reimbursement records. Smoothing time series and survival analyses were conducted to evaluate the trends of hospital case fatality rates (CFR) and the probability of death according to factors such as sex, age, ethnicity, comorbidities, length of stay and ICU use. With 398,063 admissions and 86,452 (21.7%) deaths, the overall age-standardized hospital CFR trend decreased throughout the period, varying from 31.8% (95%CI: 31.2 to 32.5%) in week 10 to 18.2% (95%CI: 17.6 to 18.8%) in week 40. This decreasing trend was observed in all sex, age, ethnic groups, length of stay and ICU admissions. Consistently, later admission (from July to September) was an independent protective factor. Patients 80+ year old had a hazard ratio of 8.18 (95% CI: 7.51 to 8.91). Ethnicity, comorbidities, and ICU need were also associated with the death risk. Although also decreasing, the CFR was always around 40-50% in people who needed an ICU admission. The overall hospital CFR of COVID-19 has decreased in Brazilian public hospitals during the first wave of the pandemic in 2020. Nevertheless, during the entire period, the CFR was still very high, suggesting the need for improving COVID-19 hospital care in Brazil.

Highlights

  • Novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is the major global public health threat today

  • The overall hospital case-fatality rate (CFR) of COVID-19 has decreased in Brazilian public hospitals during the first wave of the pandemic in 2020

  • Based on our selection criteria, between March 1 and October 3, the SIHSUS received 398,063 reimbursement authorizations classified as COVID-19-related hospital admissions

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Summary

Introduction

As of 26 March 2021, there were more than 124,535,520 confirmed cases and 2,738,876 deaths reported worldwide (https://covid19.who.int). The infection fatality rate of COVID-19 across countries was estimated to be 0.68% (0.53%–0.82%) based on a systematic review and meta-analysis of published studies until June 16, 2020 [1]. Another systematic review and meta-analysis assessed the casefatality rate (CFR) of patients with confirmed [2] COVID-19 in intensive care units, showing a CFR of 41.6% (34.0–49.7%). The authors suggested that the reported mortality rates declined from above 50% in March 2020 to close to 40% in May 2020. Both metaanalyses showed considerable heterogeneity, which may mean that observed differences in results from the included studies are not comparable.

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