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COVID-19 Severity and Survival over Time in Patients with Hematologic Malignancies: A Population-Based Registry Study.

Authors :
Martínez-López J
De la Cruz J
Gil-Manso R
Alegre A
Ortiz J
Llamas P
Martínez Y
Hernández-Rivas JÁ
González-Gascón I
Benavente C
Estival Monteliu P
Jiménez-Yuste V
Canales M
Bastos M
Kwon M
Valenciano S
Callejas-Charavia M
López-Jiménez J
Herrera P
Duarte R
Núñez Martín-Buitrago L
Sanchez Godoy P
Jacome Yerovi C
Martínez-Barranco P
García Roa M
Escolano Escobar C
Matilla A
Rosado Sierra B
Aláez-Usón MC
Quiroz-Cervantes K
Martínez-Chamorro C
Pérez-Oteyza J
Martos-Martinez R
Herráez R
González-Santillana C
Del Campo JF
Alonso A
de la Fuente A
Pascual A
Bustelos-Rodriguez R
Sebrango A
Ruiz E
Marcheco-Pupo EA
Grande C
Cedillo Á
Lumbreras C
Arroyo Barea A
Casas-Rojo JM
Calbacho M
Diez-Martín JL
García-Suárez J
Source :
Cancers [Cancers (Basel)] 2023 Feb 27; Vol. 15 (5). Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Feb 27.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Mortality rates for COVID-19 have declined over time in the general population, but data in patients with hematologic malignancies are contradictory. We identified independent prognostic factors for COVID-19 severity and survival in unvaccinated patients with hematologic malignancies, compared mortality rates over time and versus non-cancer inpatients, and investigated post COVID-19 condition. Data were analyzed from 1166 consecutive, eligible patients with hematologic malignancies from the population-based HEMATO-MADRID registry, Spain, with COVID-19 prior to vaccination roll-out, stratified into early (February-June 2020; n = 769 (66%)) and later (July 2020-February 2021; n = 397 (34%)) cohorts. Propensity-score matched non-cancer patients were identified from the SEMI-COVID registry. A lower proportion of patients were hospitalized in the later waves (54.2%) compared to the earlier (88.6%), OR 0.15, 95%CI 0.11-0.20. The proportion of hospitalized patients admitted to the ICU was higher in the later cohort (103/215, 47.9%) compared with the early cohort (170/681, 25.0%, 2.77; 2.01-3.82). The reduced 30-day mortality between early and later cohorts of non-cancer inpatients (29.6% vs. 12.6%, OR 0.34; 0.22-0.53) was not paralleled in inpatients with hematologic malignancies (32.3% vs. 34.8%, OR 1.12; 0.81-1.5). Among evaluable patients, 27.3% had post COVID-19 condition. These findings will help inform evidence-based preventive and therapeutic strategies for patients with hematologic malignancies and COVID-19 diagnosis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2072-6694
Volume :
15
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36900296
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15051497