AI Article Synopsis

  • The modified CHA2DS2VASC (M-CHA2DS2VASc) risk score incorporates factors predictive of COVID-19 outcomes, suggesting it may better predict in-hospital mortality than traditional markers like troponin levels and neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR).
  • A study involving 694 hospitalized COVID-19 patients divided them into three risk groups based on their M-CHA2DS2VASc scores, showing a clear correlation between higher scores and increased rates of negative clinical outcomes, including mortality.
  • The analysis confirmed that M-CHA2DS2VASc was an independent predictor of mortality and outperformed the traditional CHA2DS2VASC score, making it a potentially valuable tool for early risk assessment

Article Abstract

Since the modified CHA2DS2VASC (M-CHA2DS2VASc) risk score includes the prognostic risk factors for COVID-19; we assumed that it might predict in-hospital mortality and identify high-risk patients at an earlier stage compared with troponin increase and neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR). We aimed to investigate whether M-CHA2DS2VASC RS is an independent predictor of mortality in patients hospitalized with COVID-19 and to compare its discriminative ability with troponin increase and NLR in terms of predicting mortality. A total of 694 patients were retrospectively analyzed and divided into 3 groups according to M-CHA2DS2VASC RS which was simply created by changing gender criteria of the CHA2DS2VASC RS from female to male (Group 1, score 0-1 (n = 289); group 2, score 2-3 (n = 231) and group 3, score ≥4 (n = 174)). Adverse clinical events were defined as in-hospital mortality, admission to intensive care unit, need for high-flow oxygen and/or intubation. As the M-CHA2DS2VASC RS increased, adverse clinical outcomes were also significantly increased (Group 1, 3.8%; group 2, 12.6%; group 3, 20.8%; p <0.001 for in-hospital mortality). The multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that M-CHA2DS2VASC RS, troponin increase and neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio were independent predictors of in-hospital mortality (p = 0.005, odds ratio 1.29 per scale for M-CHA2DS2VASC RS). In receiver operating characteristic analysis, comparative discriminative ability of M-CHA2DS2VASC RS was superior to CHA2DS2VASC RS score. Area under the curve (AUC) values for in-hospital mortality was 0.70 and 0.64, respectively. (AUC vs. AUC z test = 3.56, p 0.0004) In conclusion, admission M-CHA2DS2VASc RS may be a useful tool to predict in-hospital mortality in patients with COVID-19.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7453224PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amjcard.2020.08.040DOI Listing

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