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A One-Year Hospital-Based Prospective Covid- 19 Open-Cohort in the Eastern Mediterranean Region: The Khorshid Covid Cohort (Kcc) Study Publisher Pubmed

Summary: Study tracks COVID-19 patients, finding low oxygen and blood issues raise death risk, aiding hospital resource planning. #COVID19 #HealthOutcomes

Sami R1 ; Soltaninejad F2 ; Amra B3 ; Naderi Z4 ; Javanmard SH5 ; Iraj B6 ; Ahmadi SH7 ; Shayganfar A7 ; Dehghan M8 ; Khademi N8 ; Hosseini NS8 ; Mortazavi M9 ; Mansourian M10, 11 ; Mananas MA11, 12 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Sami R1
  2. Soltaninejad F2
  3. Amra B3
  4. Naderi Z4
  5. Javanmard SH5
  6. Iraj B6
  7. Ahmadi SH7
  8. Shayganfar A7
  9. Dehghan M8
  10. Khademi N8
  11. Hosseini NS8
  12. Mortazavi M9
  13. Mansourian M10, 11
  14. Mananas MA11, 12
  15. Marateb HR11, 13, 14
  16. Adibi P15

Source: PLoS ONE Published:2020


Abstract

The COVID-19 is rapidly scattering worldwide, and the number of cases in the Eastern Mediterranean Region is rising. Thus, there is a need for immediate targeted actions. We designed a longitudinal study in a hot outbreak zone to analyze the serial findings between infected patients for detecting temporal changes from February 2020. In a hospital-based open-cohort study, patients are followed from admission until one year from their discharge (the 1st, 4th, 12th weeks, and the first year). The patient recruitment phase finished at the end of August 2020, and the follow-up continues by the end of August 2021. The measurements included demographic, socio-economics, symptoms, health service diagnosis and treatment, contact history, and psychological variables. The signs improvement, death, length of stay in hospital were considered primary, and impaired pulmonary function and psychotic disorders were considered main secondary outcomes. Moreover, clinical symptoms and respiratory functions are being determined in such follow-ups. Among the first 600 COVID-19 cases, 490 patients with complete information (39% female; the average age of 57±15 years) were analyzed. Seven percent of these patients died. The three main leading causes of admission were: Fever (77%), dry cough (73%), and fatigue (69%). The most prevalent comorbidities between COVID-19 patients were hypertension (35%), diabetes (28%), and ischemic heart disease (14%). The percentage of primary composite endpoints (PCEP), defined as death, the use of mechanical ventilation, or admission to an intensive care unit was 18%. The Cox Proportional-Hazards Model for PCEP indicated the following significant risk factors: Oxygen saturation < 80% (HR = 6.3; [CI 95%: 2.5,15.5]), lymphopenia (HR = 3.5; [CI 95%: 2.2,5.5]), Oxygen saturation 80%-90% (HR = 2.5; [CI 95%: 1.1,5.8]), and thrombocytopenia (HR = 1.6; [CI 95%: 1.1,2.5]). This long-term prospective Cohort may support healthcare professionals in the management of resources following this pandemic. © 2020 Sami et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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