Clinical characteristics and risk factors for mortality in hematologic patients affected by COVID-19.
Chiara CattaneoRosa DaffiniChiara PaganiMassimo SalvettiValentina ManciniErika BorlenghiMariella D'AddaMargherita ObertiAnna PainiCarolina De CiuceisKordelia BarbullushiValeria CancelliAngelo BelottiAlessandro ReMarina MottaAnnalisa PeliNicola BianchettiAntonella AnastasiaDaniela DalceggioAldo M RoccaroAlessandra TucciRoberto CairoliMaria Lorenza MuiesanGiuseppe RossiPublished in: Cancer (2020)
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection occurs across all different types of hematologic disease; however, the risk of acquiring it is lower for patients with chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms, including chronic myeloid leukemia, and higher for patients with immune-mediated anemia on immunosuppressive treatment. The 30-day mortality rate is 39.2%, which is far higher than the rates for both uninfected hematologic controls (3%; P < .001) and nonhematologic patients with COVID-19 (23.5%; P = .02) despite matching for age, sex, comorbidities, and severity of disease. Variables independently associated with a worse prognosis are the severity of the respiratory syndrome at presentation and any type of active hematologic treatment. Neither diagnosis nor disease status influence the prognosis.