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Oncology Research and Treatment ; 45(Supplement 3):190-191, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2214119

ABSTRACT

Background: Active cancer has been identified as an independent risk factor for severity and mortality in COVID-19. However, direct comparisons of SARS-CoV-2 infected patients (pts) with active and non-active cancers remain scarce. Method(s): We retrospectively analyzed a cohort of pts with cancer with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, enrolled 03/16/2020 - 07/31/2021. Data on demographics, cancer and laboratory findings were collected. Descriptive and subsequent regression analysis was performed. Endpoints were progression to severe COVID-19 and infection-associated mortality. Result(s): In total, 987 pts with cancer (510 active vs 477 non-active) were included in our analysis. Majority was male and > 55 years, with a higher number of elderly pts with non-active cancer. CCI was 4.75 vs 3.85 in pts with active and non-active cancer (p<0.001). Localized solid tumors were reported in 38 vs 79% (p<0.001), metastasized in 37.5 vs 5.5% (p<0.001) and hematological diseases in 37.5 vs 19.5% (p<0.001) pts with active and non-active cancer, respectively. At virus detection, majority of pts showed mild to moderate symptoms, while deterioration to severe COVID-19 was slightly more common in pts with active cancer (19% vs 16%;p=0.284). COVID-19 related mortality was significantly higher in pts with active cancer (24% vs 17.5%, p<0.001). In line, severe cytopenia and an increase of inflammatory markers were common findings in pts with active cancer at baseline, particularly in those who developed severe infection or died. Multivariate analysis revealed that ferritin (14.24 [2.1-96], p=0.006) and CRP (2.85 [1.02-8.02], p=0.046) were associated with severe COVID-19 and infection-related mortality. In pts with non-active cancer, association was seen for ferritin only (4.1 [1.51-11.17], p=0.006). Conclusion(s): Comparing pts with active and non-active cancer, mortality rate was significantly higher in pts with active cancer. Also inflammatory markers were significantly increased assuming higher levels of inflammation may play a role in adverse outcome of COVID-19 in pts with active cancer.

2.
Open Forum Infectious Diseases ; 9(Supplement 2):S741-S742, 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2189897

ABSTRACT

Background. Numerous predictive clinical scores with varying discriminatory performance have been developed in the context of the current coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. To support clinical application, we test the transferability of the frequently applied 4C mortality score (4C score) to the German prospective Cross-Sectoral Platform (SUEP) of the National Pandemic Cohort Network (NAPKON) compared to the non COVID-19 specific quick sequential organ failure assessment score (qSOFA). Our project aims to externally validate these two scores, stratified for the most prevalent variants of concerns (VOCs) of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus type 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in Germany. Methods. A total of 685 adults with polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-detected SARS-CoV-2 infection were included from NAPKON-SUEP. Patients were recruited from 11/2020 to 03/2022 at 34 university and non-university hospitals across Germany. Missing values were complemented using multiple imputation. Predictive performance for in-hospital mortality at day of baseline visit was determined by area under the curve (AUC) with 95%-confidence interval (CI) stratified by VOCs of SARS-CoV-2 (alpha, delta, omicron) (Figure 1). Figure 1: Study flow chart with inclusion criteria and methodological workflow. Results. Preliminary results suggest a high predictive performance of the 4C score for in-hospital mortality (Table 1). This applies for the overall cohort (AUC 0.813 (95%CI 0.738-0.888)) as well as the VOC-strata (alpha: AUC 0.859 (95%CI 0.748-0.970);delta: AUC 0.769 (95%CI 0.657-0.882);omicron: AUC 0.866 (95%CI 0.724-1.000)). The overall mortality rates across the defined 4C score risk groups are 0.3% (low), 3.2% (intermediate), 11.6% (high), and 49.5% (very high). The 4C score performs significantly better than the qSOFA (Chi2-test: p=0.001) and the qSOFA does not seem to be a suitable tool in this context. Table 1: Discriminatory performance of the 4C Mortality Score and the qSOFA score within the validation cohort NAPKON-SUEP stratified by the Variant of Concerns of SARS-CoV- 2. Conclusion. Despite its development in the early phase of the pandemic and improved treatment, external validation of the 4C score in NAPKON-SUEP indicates a high predictive performance for in-hospital mortality across all VOCs. However, since the qSOFA was not specifically designed for this predictive issue, it shows low discriminatory performance, as in other validation studies. Any interpretations regarding the omicron stratum are limited due to the sample size.

5.
European Journal of Neurology ; 28(SUPPL 1):102, 2021.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-1307707

ABSTRACT

Background and aims: Register studies and cohort analyses of clinical data are essential to study neurological manifestations of COVID-19 at a large scale. Methods: We analyzed neurological manifestations in COVID-19 patients, diagnosed before Aug 25th 2020, and registered in the European multinational LEOSS registry. Results: Of the 3127 COVID-19 patients, 95.2% were hospitalized. In 54.4% at least one neurological symptom, and in 3.3% a new neurological complication occurred. Preexisting neurological comorbidities were reported in 18.1% of the patients. Neurological symptoms were excessive tiredness (27.6%), headache (15.3%), nausea/emesis (14.0%), muscular weakness (13.2%), smell (6.9%), taste disorder (8.3%) and delirium (6.3%). Intracerebral bleeding occurred in 1.2%, ischemic stroke in 0.5%, and meningitis/ encephalitis in 0.4%. Overall, the death rate was 17.5%. It was higher in patients with the following neurological comorbidities: dementia 38.0%, movement disorders 32.8%, and prior cerebrovascular disease 32.3%. A multivariable logistic regression model found age (OR 1.53), cardiovascular diseases (OR 1.74), muscle weakness (OR 1.40), pulmonary diseases (1.49) and male gender (OR 1.52) to be associated with a significantly increased risk for a critical COVID-19 disease course, failed recovery, and death. Conclusion: The neurological manifestations revealed in COVID-19 patients of this study are mostly in agreement with previously published data. Several neurological conditions, such as prior cerebrovascular diseases or dementia appeared to be associated with a higher risk in unadjusted analyses, which was not confirmed in a multivariable analysis adjusting for confounding variables such as age and sex. These findings contrast previously published studies and stress the importance of considering putative confounds in medical statistics carefully.

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