4.6 Article

Demographics, Outcomes, and Risk Factors for Patients with Sarcoma and COVID-19: A CCC19-Registry Based Retrospective Cohort Study

期刊

CANCERS
卷 14, 期 17, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14174334

关键词

sarcoma; COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; CCC19

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资金

  1. Vanderbilt Institute for Clinical and Translational Research (NCATS/National Institute of Health (NIH)) [UL1 TR000445]
  2. National Cancer Institute [P30 CA068485]
  3. NIH [P30CA015704, P30CA016056]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Patients with sarcoma have a higher risk of developing complications from COVID-19, and patients with bone sarcoma may be at a greater risk of death from COVID-19. Older age, poor performance status, and lung metastases are risk factors for more severe COVID-19.
Simple Summary Sarcomas are a group of cancers with differing clinical features, some of which require long courses of cytotoxic chemotherapy. Therefore, patients with sarcoma may be at high risk of developing severe COVID-19. The aim of our study was to describe risk factors and clinical outcomes for patients with sarcoma and COVID-19. We show that patients with sarcoma have high rates of complications from COVID-19. Risk factors for more severe COVID-19 included older age, poor performance status, and lung metastases. We also compared 30 day mortality rates to a matched cohort of patients with sarcoma without COVID-19 and found that patients with bone sarcoma may be at higher risk of death from COVID-19 than patients with other sarcoma subtypes. Background: Patients with sarcoma often require individualized treatment strategies and are likely to receive aggressive immunosuppressive therapies, which may place them at higher risk for severe COVID-19. We aimed to describe demographics, risk factors, and outcomes for patients with sarcoma and COVID-19. Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study of patients with sarcoma and COVID-19 reported to the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19) registry (NCT04354701) from 17 March 2020 to 30 September 2021. Demographics, sarcoma histologic type, treatments, and COVID-19 outcomes were analyzed. Results: of 281 patients, 49% (n = 139) were hospitalized, 33% (n = 93) received supplemental oxygen, 11% (n = 31) were admitted to the ICU, and 6% (n = 16) received mechanical ventilation. A total of 23 (8%) died within 30 days of COVID-19 diagnosis and 44 (16%) died overall at the time of analysis. When evaluated by sarcoma subtype, patients with bone sarcoma and COVID-19 had a higher mortality rate than patients from a matched SEER cohort (13.5% vs 4.4%). Older age, poor performance status, recent systemic anti-cancer therapy, and lung metastases all contributed to higher COVID-19 severity. Conclusions: Patients with sarcoma have high rates of severe COVID-19 and those with bone sarcoma may have the greatest risk of death.

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