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Digestive Manifestations in Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19

Authors :
Vikesh K. Singh
Ashwinee Condon
Rosemary Nustas
Judy A. Trieu
Robin B. Mendelsohn
Don C. Rockey
Joy M. Hutchinson
Nauzer Forbes
Lujain Jaza
Eric F. Howard
Christopher S. Huang
Sheryl J. Korsnes
Delia Calo
Gabriela Kuftinec
Rebecca L. Spitzer
Vikram Kanagala
Maria Ines Pinto-Sanchez
Georgios I. Papachristou
Mary K. West
Andrew M. Aneese
Janak N. Shah
Stephanie Mitchell
Jennifer M. Kolb
Benita K. Glamour
Selena Zhou
Luis F. Lara
Gail McNulty
Kulwinder S. Dua
Jordan Wood
Duyen T. Dang
Jason R. Taylor
Ayesha Kamal
William M. Tierney
Harminder Singh
Jeong Yun Yang
Liam Hilson
Cyrus R. Piraka
Sunil Amin
Rebekah E. Dixon
B. Joseph Elmunzer
Vladimir Kushnir
Teldon B. Alford
Millie Chau
Richard S. Kwon
Abdul Haseeb
Emil Agarunov
Lydia D. Foster
Evan L. Fogel
Caroline G. McLeod
Charlie Fox
Laith H. Jamil
Olga C. Aroniadis
Joseph F. LaComb
Emad Qayed
Eric D. Shah
Harsh K. Patel
Ambreen A. Merchant
Michael L. Volk
Ali Zakaria
Valerie Durkalski
Amrita Sethi
Adrienne Lenhart
Swati Pawa
Rishi Pawa
Amar R. Deshpande
Marc S. Piper
Alexandria M. Lenyo
Bryan G. Sauer
Zahra Solati
James M. Scheiman
Dhiraj Yadav
Andrew Canakis
Heiko Pohl
Zachary L. Smith
Vaishali Patel
Katherine A. Hanley
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

BackgroundThe prevalence and significance of digestive manifestations in COVID-19 remain uncertain.MethodsConsecutive patients hospitalized with COVID-19 were identified across a geographically diverse alliance of medical centers in North America. Data pertaining to baseline characteristics, symptomatology, laboratory assessment, imaging, and endoscopic findings from the time of symptom onset until discharge or death were manually abstracted from electronic health records to characterize the prevalence, spectrum, and severity of digestive manifestations. Regression analyses were performed to evaluate the association between digestive manifestations and severe outcomes related to COVID-19.ResultsA total of 1992 patients across 36 centers met eligibility criteria and were included. Overall, 53% of patients experienced at least one gastrointestinal symptom at any time during their illness, most commonly diarrhea (34%), nausea (27%), vomiting (16%), and abdominal pain (11%). In 74% of cases, gastrointestinal symptoms were judged to be mild. In total, 35% of patients developed an abnormal alanine aminotransferase or total bilirubin level; these were elevated to less than 5 times the upper limit of normal in 77% of cases. After adjusting for potential confounders, the presence of gastrointestinal symptoms at any time (odds ratio 0.93, 95% confidence interval 0.76-1.15) or liver test abnormalities on admission (odds ratio 1.31, 95% confidence interval 0.80-2.12) were not independently associated with mechanical ventilation or death.ConclusionsAmong patients hospitalized with COVID-19, gastrointestinal symptoms and liver test abnormalities were common but the majority were mild and their presence was not associated with a more severe clinical course

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cf22403c54e20a72a3239b01cb06a5d0