Back to Search Start Over

Gender Differences in the Presentation and Outcomes of Hospitalized Patients With COVID-19

Authors :
Charbel Maroun Eid
Martino Pepe
Rodolfo Romero
Federico Guerra
Fabrizio Ugo
Alex F Castro-Mejía
Gisela Feltes
Aitor Uribarri
Adelina Gonzalez
Jia Huang
Enrico Cerrato
Sergio Raposeiras Roubín
Vicente Estrada
Carloalberto Biolè
Matteo Bianco
Inmaculada Fernández-Rozas
Víctor Manuel Becerra-Muñoz
Natividad Blasco-Angulo
Marcos García Aguado
Emilio Alfonso-Rodríguez
Amanda Spirito
Carlos Macaya
Ibrahim Akin
Cristina Fernández-Pérez
Iván J. Núñez-Gil
María C Viana-Llamas
Source :
Journal of Hospital Medicine, r-INCLIVA. Repositorio Institucional de Producción Científica de INCLIVA, instname
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Gender-related differences in COVID-19 clinical presentation, disease progression, and mortality have not been adequately explored. We analyzed the clinical profile, presentation, treatments, and outcomes of patients according to gender in the HOPE-COVID-19 International Registry. Among 2,798 enrolled patients, 1,111 were women (39.7%). Male patients had a higher prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors and more comorbidities at baseline. After propensity score matching, 876 men and 876 women were selected. Male patients more often reported fever, whereas female patients more often reported vomiting, diarrhea, and hyposmia/anosmia. Laboratory tests in men presented alterations consistent with a more severe COVID-19 infection (eg, significantly higher C-reactive protein, troponin, transaminases, lymphocytopenia, thrombocytopenia, and ferritin). Systemic inflammatory response syndrome, bilateral pneumonia, respiratory insufficiency, and renal failure were significantly more frequent in men. Men more often required pronation, corticosteroids, and tocilizumab administration. A significantly higher 30-day mortality was observed in men vs women (23.4% vs 19.2%; P = .039). Trial Numbers: NCT04334291/EUPAS34399.

Details

ISSN :
15535606 and 15535592
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Hospital Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....56466f878dd7d93ee13f3ddc93192a7c