Risk Factors for Radiological Progression Within Admissive One Week in the Hospitalized COVID-19 Omicron Variant-Infected Patients

Recently, the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant was identified as responsible for a novel wave of COVID-19 worldwide. We perform a retrospective study to identify potential risk factors contributing to radiological progression in the COVID-19 patients due to the Omicron variant infection. These findings wo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Infection and drug resistance 2022-01, Vol.15, p.7127-7137
Hauptverfasser: Zhu, Feng-Feng, Gu, Bin-Bin, Jin, Yu-Jia, Yao, Lin, Zhou, Lin, Zou, Di, Ding, Jian, Zhou, Teng, Shen, Xing-Hua, Chen, Cheng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recently, the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant was identified as responsible for a novel wave of COVID-19 worldwide. We perform a retrospective study to identify potential risk factors contributing to radiological progression in the COVID-19 patients due to the Omicron variant infection. These findings would provide guiding information for making clinical decisions that could improve the Omicron infection prognosis and reduce disease-related death. This is a retrospective cohort study from a single center in China. According to the radiological change within admissive one week, enrolled cases were divided into two groups: the progressive (1w-PD) and the stable or improved disease (1w-non-PD). Separate analyses were performed on patients stratified into subgroups using the Mann-Whitney -test, the Fisher exact test, or the Chi-squared test and a multivariable logistic regression analysis. Both the 1w-non-PD and 1w-PD cohorts displayed comparable asymptomatic infection, have similar underlying disease, impairment in respiratory function, coagulation dysfunction, tissue injury, SARS-CoV-2 viral load, and disease severity. However, the 1w-PD cohort was more inclined to cluster in populations presented with age between 41 and 65, higher CURB-65 scores, undetectable SARS-CoV-2 IgG, and lung affection. Based on the multiple logistic regression analysis, complicated bilateral and ground-glass opacities (GGOs) like pneumonia at admission were independent risk factors to radiological progression within admissive one week. This study provided preliminary data regarding disease progression in Omicron-infected patients that indicated the development of pneumonia in the context of Omicron infection was worthy of potential risk factors.
ISSN:1178-6973
1178-6973
DOI:10.2147/IDR.S388696