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Prevalence and Death Rate of COVID-19 in Autoimmune Systemic Diseases in the First Three Pandemic Waves. Relationship with Disease Subgroups and Ongoing Therapies.

Authors :
Ferri C
Raimondo V
Gragnani L
Giuggioli D
Dagna L
Tavoni A
Ursini F
L'Andolina M
Caso F
Ruscitti P
Caminiti M
Foti R
Riccieri V
Guiducci S
Pellegrini R
Zanatta E
Varcasia G
Olivo D
Gigliotti P
Cuomo G
Murdaca G
Cecchetti R
De Angelis R
Romeo N
Ingegnoli F
Cozzi F
Codullo V
Cavazzana I
Colaci M
Abignano G
De Santis M
Lubrano E
Fusaro E
Spinella A
Lumetti F
De Luca G
Bellando-Randone S
Visalli E
Bosco YD
Amato G
Giannini D
Bilia S
Masini F
Pellegrino G
Pigatto E
Generali E
Mariano GP
Pettiti G
Zanframundo G
Brittelli R
Aiello V
Caminiti R
Scorpiniti D
Ferrari T
Campochiaro C
Brusi V
Fredi M
Moschetti L
Cacciapaglia F
Paparo SR
Ragusa F
Mazzi V
Elia G
Ferrari SM
Di Cola I
Vadacca M
Lorusso S
Monti M
Lorini S
Aprile ML
Tasso M
Miccoli M
Bosello S
D'Angelo S
Doria A
Franceschini F
Meliconi R
Matucci-Cerinic M
Iannone F
Giacomelli R
Salvarani C
Zignego AL
Fallahi P
Antonelli A
Source :
Current pharmaceutical design [Curr Pharm Des] 2022; Vol. 28 (24), pp. 2022-2028.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective: Autoimmune systemic diseases (ASD) represent a predisposing condition to COVID-19. Our prospective, observational multicenter telephone survey study aimed to investigate the prevalence, prognostic factors, and outcomes of COVID-19 in Italian ASD patients.<br />Methods: The study included 3,918 ASD pts (815 M, 3103 F; mean age 59±12SD years) consecutively recruited between March 2020 and May 2021 at the 36 referral centers of COVID-19 and ASD Italian Study Group. The possible development of COVID-19 was recorded by means of a telephone survey using a standardized symptom assessment questionnaire.<br />Results: ASD patients showed a significantly higher prevalence of COVID-19 (8.37% vs. 6.49%; p<0.0001) but a death rate statistically comparable to the Italian general population (3.65% vs. 2.95%). Among the 328 ASD patients developing COVID-19, 17% needed hospitalization, while mild-moderate manifestations were observed in 83% of cases. Moreover, 12/57 hospitalized patients died due to severe interstitial pneumonia and/or cardiovascular events; systemic sclerosis (SSc) patients showed a significantly higher COVID-19-related death rate compared to the general population (6.29% vs. 2.95%; p=0.018). Major adverse prognostic factors to develop COVID-19 were: older age, male gender, SSc, pre-existing ASD-related interstitial lung involvement, and long-term steroid treatment. Of note, patients treated with conventional synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (csDMARDs) showed a significantly lower prevalence of COVID-19 compared to those without (3.58% vs. 46.99%; p=0.000), as well as the SSc patients treated with low dose aspirin (with 5.57% vs. without 27.84%; p=0.000).<br />Conclusion: During the first three pandemic waves, ASD patients showed a death rate comparable to the general population despite the significantly higher prevalence of COVID-19. A significantly increased COVID-19- related mortality was recorded in only SSc patients' subgroup, possibly favored by preexisting lung fibrosis. Moreover, ongoing long-term treatment with csDMARDs in ASD might usefully contribute to the generally positive outcomes of this frail patients' population.<br /> (Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.net.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1873-4286
Volume :
28
Issue :
24
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Current pharmaceutical design
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35726427
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2174/1381612828666220614151732