Eruptions and related clinical course among 296 hospitalized adults with confirmed COVID-19

Limited information exists on mucocutaneous disease and its relation to course of COVID-19. To estimate prevalence of mucocutaneous findings, characterize morphologic patterns, and describe relationship to course in hospitalized adults with COVID-19. Prospective cohort study at 2 tertiary hospitals...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology 2021-04, Vol.84 (4), p.946-952
Hauptverfasser: Rekhtman, Sergey, Tannenbaum, Rachel, Strunk, Andrew, Birabaharan, Morgan, Wright, Shari, Grbic, Nicole, Joseph, Ashna, Lin, Stephanie K., Zhang, Aaron C., Lee, Eric C., Rivera, Erika, Qiu, Michael, Chelico, John, Garg, Amit
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Limited information exists on mucocutaneous disease and its relation to course of COVID-19. To estimate prevalence of mucocutaneous findings, characterize morphologic patterns, and describe relationship to course in hospitalized adults with COVID-19. Prospective cohort study at 2 tertiary hospitals (Northwell Health) between May 11, 2020 and June 15, 2020. Among 296 hospitalized adults with COVID-19, 35 (11.8%) had at least 1 disease-related eruption. Patterns included ulcer (13/35, 37.1%), purpura (9/35, 25.7%), necrosis (5/35, 14.3%), nonspecific erythema (4/35, 11.4%), morbilliform eruption (4/35, 11.4%), pernio-like lesions (4/35, 11.4%), and vesicles (1/35, 2.9%). Patterns also showed anatomic site specificity. A greater proportion of patients with mucocutaneous findings used mechanical ventilation (61% vs 30%), used vasopressors (77% vs 33%), initiated dialysis (31% vs 9%), had thrombosis (17% vs 11%), and had in-hospital mortality (34% vs 12%) compared with those without mucocutaneous findings. Patients with mucocutaneous disease were more likely to use mechanical ventilation (adjusted prevalence ratio, 1.98; 95% confidence interval, 1.37-2.86); P 
ISSN:0190-9622
1097-6787
DOI:10.1016/j.jaad.2020.12.046