1. Clinical outcomes of patients with and without HIV hospitalized with COVID‐19 in England during the early stages of the pandemic: a matched retrospective multi‐centre analysis (RECEDE‐C19 study).
- Author
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Lee, Ming Jie, Snell, Luke Blagdon, Douthwaite, Sam T., Fidler, Sarah, Fitzgerald, Naomi, Goodwin, Lynsey, Hamzah, Lisa, Kulasegaram, Ranjababu, Lawrence, Sarah, Lwanga, Julianne, Marchant, Rebecca, Orkin, Chloe, Palfreeman, Adrian, Parthasarathi, Padmini, Pareek, Manish, Ring, Kyle, Sharaf, Hamed, Shekarchi‐Khanghahi, Eleanor, Simons, Rebecca, and Teh, Jhia Jiat
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RESEARCH , *COVID-19 , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RACE , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *HOSPITAL care , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PSYCHOLOGY of HIV-positive persons , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models - Abstract
Background: The contribution of HIV to COVID‐19 outcomes in hospitalized inpatients remains unclear. We conducted a multi‐centre, retrospective matched cohort study of SARS‐CoV‐2 PCR‐positive hospital inpatients analysed by HIV status. Methods: HIV‐negative patients were matched to people living with HIV (PLWH) admitted from 1 February 2020 to 31 May 2020 up to a 3:1 ratio by the following: hospital site, SARS‐CoV‐2 test date ± 7 days, age ± 5 years, gender, and index of multiple deprivation decile ± 1. The primary objective was clinical improvement (two‐point improvement or better on a seven‐point ordinal scale) or hospital discharge by day 28, whichever was earlier. Results: A total of 68 PLWH and 181 HIV‐negative comparators were included. In unadjusted analyses, PLWH had a reduced hazard of achieving clinical improvement or discharge [adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) = 0.57, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.39–0.85, p = 0.005], but this association was ameliorated (aHR = 0.70, 95% CI: 0.43–1.17, p = 0.18) after additional adjustment for ethnicity, frailty, baseline hypoxaemia, duration of symptoms prior to baseline, body mass index (BMI) categories and comorbidities. Baseline frailty (aHR = 0.79, 95% CI: 0.65–0.95, p = 0.011), malignancy (aHR = 0.37, 95% CI 0.17, 0.82, p = 0.014) remained associated with poorer outcomes. The PLWH were more likely to be of black, Asian and minority ethnic background (75.0% vs 48.6%, p = 0.0002), higher median clinical frailty score [3 × interquartile range (IQR): 2–5 vs, 2 × IQR: 1–4, p = 0.0069), and to have a non‐significantly higher proportion of active malignancy (14.4% vs 9.9%, p = 0.29). Conclusions: Adjusting for confounding comorbidities and demographics in a matched cohort ameliorated differences in outcomes of PLWH hospitalized with COVID‐19, highlighting the importance of an appropriate comparison group when assessing outcomes of PLWH hospitalized with COVID‐19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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