Characteristics of COVID-19 patients with multiorgan injury across the pandemic in a large academic health system in the Bronx, New York

Justin Y. Lu, Alexandra Buczek, Roman Fleysher, Benjamin Musheyev, Erin M. Henninger, Kasra Jabbery, Mahendranath Rangareddy, Devdatta Kanawade, Chandra Nelapat, Selvin Soby, Parsa Mirhaji, Wouter S. Hoogenboom, Tim Q. Duong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: To investigate the evolution of COVID-19 patient characteristics and multiorgan injury across the pandemic. Methods: This retrospective cohort study consisted of 40,387 individuals tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 in the Montefiore Health System in Bronx, NY, between March 2020 and February 2022, of which 11,306 were hospitalized. Creatinine, troponin, and alanine aminotransferase were used to define acute kidney injury (AKI), acute cardiac injury (ACI) and acute liver injury, respectively. Demographics, comorbidities, emergency department visits, hospitalization, intensive care utilization, and mortality were analyzed across the pandemic. Results: COVID-19 positive cases, emergency department visits, hospitalization and mortality rate showed four distinct waves with a large first wave in April 2020, two small (Alpha and Delta) waves, and a large Omicron wave in December 2021. Omicron was more infectious but less lethal (p = 0.05). Among hospitalized COVID-19 patients, age decreased (p = 0.014), female percentage increased (p = 0.023), Hispanic (p = 0.028) and non-Hispanic Black (p = 0.05) percentages decreased, and patients with pre-existing diabetes (p = 0.002) and hypertension (p = 0.04) decreased across the pandemic. More than half (53.1%) of hospitalized patients had major organ injury. Patients with AKI, ACI and its combinations were older, more likely males, had more comorbidities, and consisted more of non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic patients (p = 0.005). Patients with AKI and its combinations had 4-9 times higher adjusted risk of mortality than those without. Conclusions: There were shifts in demographics toward younger age and proportionally more females with COVID-19 across the pandemic. While the overall trend showed improved clinical outcomes, a substantial number of COVID-19 patients developed multi-organ injuries over time. These findings could bring awareness to at-risk patients for long-term organ injuries and help to better inform public policy and outreach initiatives.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere15277
JournalHeliyon
Volume9
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2023

Keywords

  • Acute cardiac injury
  • Acute kidney injury
  • Omicron
  • SARS-CoV-2

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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