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Assessment of Regional Variability in COVID-19 Outcomes Among Patients With Cancer in the United States.

Authors :
Hawley, Jessica E
Sun, Tianyi
Chism, David D
Duma, Narjust
Fu, Julie C
Gatson, Na Tosha N
Mishra, Sanjay
Nguyen, Ryan H
Reid, Sonya A
Serrano, Oscar K
Singh, Sunny R K
Venepalli, Neeta K
Bakouny, Ziad
Bashir, Babar
Bilen, Mehmet A
Caimi, Paolo F
Choueiri, Toni K
Dawsey, Scott J
Fecher, Leslie A
Flora, Daniel B
Friese, Christopher R
Glover, Michael J
Gonzalez, Cyndi J
Goyal, Sharad
Halfdanarson, Thorvardur R
Hershman, Dawn L
Khan, Hina
Labaki, Chris
Lewis, Mark A
McKay, Rana R
Messing, Ian
Pennell, Nathan A
Puc, Matthew
Ravindranathan, Deepak
Rhodes, Terence D
Rivera, Andrea V
Roller, John
Schwartz, Gary K
Shah, Sumit A
Shaya, Justin A
Streckfuss, Mitrianna
Thompson, Michael A
Wulff-Burchfield, Elizabeth M
Xie, Zhuoer
Yu, Peter Paul
Warner, Jeremy L
Shah, Dimpy P
French, Benjamin
Hwang, Clara
Hawley, Jessica E
Sun, Tianyi
Chism, David D
Duma, Narjust
Fu, Julie C
Gatson, Na Tosha N
Mishra, Sanjay
Nguyen, Ryan H
Reid, Sonya A
Serrano, Oscar K
Singh, Sunny R K
Venepalli, Neeta K
Bakouny, Ziad
Bashir, Babar
Bilen, Mehmet A
Caimi, Paolo F
Choueiri, Toni K
Dawsey, Scott J
Fecher, Leslie A
Flora, Daniel B
Friese, Christopher R
Glover, Michael J
Gonzalez, Cyndi J
Goyal, Sharad
Halfdanarson, Thorvardur R
Hershman, Dawn L
Khan, Hina
Labaki, Chris
Lewis, Mark A
McKay, Rana R
Messing, Ian
Pennell, Nathan A
Puc, Matthew
Ravindranathan, Deepak
Rhodes, Terence D
Rivera, Andrea V
Roller, John
Schwartz, Gary K
Shah, Sumit A
Shaya, Justin A
Streckfuss, Mitrianna
Thompson, Michael A
Wulff-Burchfield, Elizabeth M
Xie, Zhuoer
Yu, Peter Paul
Warner, Jeremy L
Shah, Dimpy P
French, Benjamin
Hwang, Clara
Source :
Kimmel Cancer Center Faculty Papers
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Importance: The COVID-19 pandemic has had a distinct spatiotemporal pattern in the United States. Patients with cancer are at higher risk of severe complications from COVID-19, but it is not well known whether COVID-19 outcomes in this patient population were associated with geography. Objective: To quantify spatiotemporal variation in COVID-19 outcomes among patients with cancer. Design, Setting, and Participants: This registry-based retrospective cohort study included patients with a historical diagnosis of invasive malignant neoplasm and laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection between March and November 2020. Data were collected from cancer care delivery centers in the United States. Exposures: Patient residence was categorized into 9 US census divisions. Cancer center characteristics included academic or community classification, rural-urban continuum code (RUCC), and social vulnerability index. Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was 30-day all-cause mortality. The secondary composite outcome consisted of receipt of mechanical ventilation, intensive care unit admission, and all-cause death. Multilevel mixed-effects models estimated associations of center-level and census division-level exposures with outcomes after adjustment for patient-level risk factors and quantified variation in adjusted outcomes across centers, census divisions, and calendar time. Results: Data for 4749 patients (median [IQR] age, 66 [56-76] years; 2439 [51.4%] female individuals, 1079 [22.7%] non-Hispanic Black individuals, and 690 [14.5%] Hispanic individuals) were reported from 83 centers in the Northeast (1564 patients [32.9%]), Midwest (1638 [34.5%]), South (894 [18.8%]), and West (653 [13.8%]). After adjustment for patient characteristics, including month of COVID-19 diagnosis, estimated 30-day mortality rates ranged from 5.2% to 26.6% across centers. Patients from centers located in metropolitan areas with population less than 250 000 (RUCC 3) had lower odds of 30-day

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Kimmel Cancer Center Faculty Papers
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1306009421
Document Type :
Electronic Resource