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A primary care approach to the COVID-19 pandemic: clinical features and natural history of 2,073 suspected cases in the Corona São Caetano programme, São Paulo, Brazil

Authors :
Sonia R P de Souza
Ligia Capuani
Tania Regina Tozetto-Mendoza
Maria Cassia Mendes-Correa
Joao C. S. Bizario
Renata Buccheri
Osorio Thomaz
Lewis F Buss
Philippe Mayaud
Fabio E. Leal
Lea Co Silva
Neal De Alexander
Lucy S. Villas-Boas
Regina M Z Grespan
Helves Domingues
Silvia Figueiredo Costa
Ester Cerdeira Sabino
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

BackgroundDespite most cases not requiring hospital care, there are limited community-based clinical data on COVID-19.Methods and findingsThe Corona São Caetano program is a primary care initiative offering COVID-19 care to all residents of São Caetano do Sul, Brazil. After triage of potentially severe cases, consecutive patients presenting between 13th April and 13th May 2020 were tested at home with SARS-CoV-2 reverse transcriptase (RT) PCR; positive patients were followed up for 14 days. RT-PCR-negative patients were offered SARS-CoV-2 serology. We describe the clinical features, virology and natural history of this prospective population-based cohort. Of 2,073 suspected COVID-19 cases, 1,583 (76·4%) were tested by RT-PCR, of whom 444 (28·0%, 95%CI: 25·9% - 30·3%) were positive; 604/1,136 (53%) RT-PCR-negative patients underwent serology, of whom 52 (8·6%) tested SARS-CoV-2 seropositive. The most common symptoms of COVID-19 were cough, fatigue, myalgia and headache; whereas self-reported fever, anosmia, and ageusia were most associated with a positive COVID-19 diagnosis. RT-PCR cycle thresholds were lower in men, older patients, those with fever and arthralgia, and around symptom onset. The rates of hospitalization and death among 444 RT-PCR-positive cases were 6·7% and 0·7%, respectively, with older age and obesity more frequent in the hospitalized group.ConclusionsCOVID-19 presents similarly to other mild respiratory disease in primary care. Some symptoms assist the differential diagnosis. Most patients can be managed at home.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ad980c7f43f9c8afc7865d7c31b94983
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.06.23.20138081