Near real-time observation reveals increased prevalence of young patients in the ICU during the emerging third SARS-CoV-2 wave in Switzerland

During the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the launch of a large-scale vaccination campaign and virus mutations have hinted at possible changes in transmissibility and the virulence affecting disease progression up to critical illness, and carry potential for future vaccination failure. To monitor diseas...

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Veröffentlicht in:Swiss medical weekly 2021-07, Vol.151 (2930), p.w20553
Hauptverfasser: Hilty, Matthias Peter, Moser, André, David, Sascha, Wendel Garcia, Pedro David, Capaldo, Giuliana, Keiser, Stefanie, Fumeaux, Thierry, Guerci, Philippe, Montomoli, Jonathan, Van Boeckel, Thomas P, Jeitziner, Marie-Madlen, Que, Yok-Ai, Jakob, Stefan, Schüpbach, Reto Andreas, Risc-Icu Investigators For Switzerland
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:During the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the launch of a large-scale vaccination campaign and virus mutations have hinted at possible changes in transmissibility and the virulence affecting disease progression up to critical illness, and carry potential for future vaccination failure. To monitor disease development over time with respect to critically ill COVID-19 patients, we report near real-time prospective observational data from the RISC-19-ICU registry that indicate changed characteristics of critically ill patients admitted to Swiss intensive care units (ICUs) at the onset of a third pandemic wave. 1829 of 3344 critically ill COVID-19 patients enrolled in the international RISC-19-ICU registry as of 31 May 2021 were treated in Switzerland and were included in the present study. Of these, 1690 patients were admitted to the ICU before 1 February 2021 and were compared with 139 patients admitted during the emerging third pandemic wave RESULTS: Third wave patients were a mean of 5.2 years (95% confidence interval [CI] 3.2-7.1) younger (median 66.0 years, interquartile range [IQR] 57.0-73.0 vs 62.0 years, IQR 54.5-68.0; p
ISSN:1424-3997
1424-3997
DOI:10.4414/smw.2021.20553