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Characteristics of our hypoxemic COVID-19 pneumonia patients receiving corticosteroids and mortality-associated factors.

Authors :
Şengül A
Mutlu P
Özdemir Ö
Satıcı C
Turan MO
Arslan S
Ogan N
Ekici Ünsal Z
Bozkuş F
Çapraz A
Demirkol MA
Mutlu LC
Yıldız Gülhan P
Alkılınç E
Fazlıoğlu N
Söyler Y
Kabalak PA
Kızılgöz D
Turan PA
Yıldırım F
Aydemir Y
Şen N
Mirici A
Source :
Expert review of respiratory medicine [Expert Rev Respir Med] 2022 Aug; Vol. 16 (8), pp. 953-958. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Jul 26.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: COVID-19 is a disease associated with diffuse lung injury that has no proven effective treatment yet. It is thought that glucocorticoids may reduce inflammation-mediated lung injury, disease progression, and mortality. We aimed to evaluate our patient's characteristics and treatment outcomes who received corticosteroids for COVID-19 pneumonia.<br />Methods: We conducted a multicenter retrospective study and reviewed 517 patients admitted due to COVID-19 pneumonia who were hypoxemic and administered steroids regarding demographic, laboratory, and radiological characteristics, treatment response, and mortality-associated factors.<br />Results: Of our 517 patients with COVID-19 pneumonia who were hypoxemic and received corticosteroids, the mortality rate was 24.4% (n = 126). The evaluation of mortality-associated factors revealed that age, comorbidities, a CURB-65 score of ≥ 2, higher SOFA scores, presence of MAS, high doses of steroids, type of steroids, COVID-19 treatment, stay in the intensive care unit, high levels of d-dimer, CRP, ferritin, and troponin, and renal dysfunction were associated with mortality.<br />Conclusion: Due to high starting and average steroid doses are more associated with mortality, high-dose steroid administration should be avoided. We believe that knowing the factors associated with mortality in these cases is essential for close follow-up. The use of CURB-65 and SOFA scores can predict prognosis in COVID-19 pneumonia.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1747-6356
Volume :
16
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Expert review of respiratory medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35839345
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/17476348.2022.2102480