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Systemic Inflammatory Predictors of In-Hospital Mortality in COVID-19 Patients: A Retrospective Study.

Bartosz KudlińskiDominika ZgołaMarta StolińskaMagdalena MurkosJagoda KaniaPawel NowakAnna NogaMagdalena WojciechGabriel ZaborniakAgnieszka Zembroń-Łacny
Published in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether routine blood tests and clinical characteristics can predict in-hospital mortality in COVID-19. Clinical data of 285 patients aged 59.7 ± 10.3 yrs. (males n = 189, females n = 96) were retrospectively collected from December 2020 to June 2021. Routine blood tests were recorded within the 1st hour of admission to hospital. The inflammatory variables, such as C-reactive protein (CRP), procalcitonin (PCT), neutrophils-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and the systemic inflammatory index (SII), exceeded the reference values in all patients and were significantly higher in deceased patients ( n = 108) compared to survivors ( n = 177). The log-rank test for comparing two survival curves showed that patients aged ≥60.5 years, with PCT ≥ 0.188 ng/mL or NLR ≥ 11.57 10 3 /µL were at a greater risk of death. NLR demonstrated a high impact on the COVID-19 mortality (HR 1.317; 95%CI 1.004-1.728; p < 0.05), whereas CRP and SII showed no effect (HR 1.000; 95%CI 1.000-1.004; p = 0.085 and HR 1.078; 95%CI 0.865-1.344; p = 0.503, respectively). In the first Polish study including COVID-19 patients, we demonstrated that age in relation to simple parameters derived from complete blood cell count has prognostic implications in the course of COVID-19 and can identify the patients at a higher risk of in-hospital mortality.
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