4.4 Article

Ambulation capacity, age, immunosuppression, and mechanical ventilation are risk factors of in-hospital death in severe COVID-19: a cohort study

Journal

CLINICS
Volume 77, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER ESPANA
DOI: 10.1016/j.clinsp.2022.100075

Keywords

COVID-19; Adult; Older Adult; Hospitalisation; Ambulation Capacity

Funding

  1. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento CNPq [402698/2020-7, 312279/2018-3]
  2. Sao Paulo State Research Support Foundation FAPESP [19618-8/2018]

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Decreased ambulation capacity, age, length of ICU stay, immunosuppression, and mechanical ventilation were associated with a high risk of in-hospital death due to COVID-19.
Importance: Despite ambulation capacity being associated with a decreased level of physical activity and survival may be influenced by the functional capacity, studies have not addressed the association between ambulation capacity and death in patients hospitalized by COVID-19. Objective: To verify the functional, clinical, and sociodemographic risk factors associated with in-hospital death in individuals with severe COVID-19. Methods: It is a cohort retrospective study performed at a large tertiary hospital. Patients 18 years of age or more, of both sexes, hospitalized due to severe COVID-19 were included. Cases with dubious medical records and/or missing essential data were excluded. Patients were classified according to their ambulation capacity before the COVID-19 infection. Information regarding sociodemographic characteristics, in-hospital death, total hospital stays, Intensive Care Unit (ICU) stays, and the necessity of Mechanical Ventilation (MV) were collected from medical records and registered in a RedCap database. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to identify possible factors associated with the in-hospital death rate. Results: Data from 1110 participants were included in the statistical analysis. The median age of the patients was 57 (46-66) years, 58.42% (n = 590) were male, and 61.73% (n = 602) were brown or black. The case fatality rate during hospitalization was 36.0% (n = 363). In-hospital death was associated with ambulation capacity; dependent ambulators (OR = 2.3; CI 95% = 1.2-4.4) and non-functional ambulation (OR = 1.9; CI 95% = 1.1-3.3), age [older adults (OR = 3.0; CI 95% = 1.9-4.), ICU stays (OR = 1.4; CI 95% = 1.2-1.4), immunosuppression (OR = 5.5 CI 95% = 2.3-13.5) and mechanical ventilation (OR = 27.5; CI 95% = 12.0-62.9). Conclusion and relevance: Decreased ambulation capacity, age, length of ICU stay, immunosuppression, and mechanical ventilation was associated with a high risk of in-hospital death due to COVID-19.

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