AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on COVID-19 patient outcomes during the first wave in Castilla y León, Spain, applying multi-state competing risk survival models to analyze patient dynamics.
  • Key demographic and clinical factors are evaluated as predictors for recovery and mortality, revealing that older age, male gender, and chronic diseases significantly increase risk, with notable differences in hospitalization and death rates based on age and sex.
  • The model provides insights into transition probabilities for patients, showing that infection timing and prior vaccinations impact recovery chances significantly.

Article Abstract

This paper analyses COVID-19 patients' dynamics during the first wave in the region of Castilla y León (Spain) with around 2.4 million inhabitants using multi-state competing risk survival models. From the date registered as the start of the clinical process, it is assumed that a patient can progress through three intermediate states until reaching an absorbing state of recovery or death. Demographic characteristics, epidemiological factors such as the time of infection and previous vaccinations, clinical history, complications during the course of the disease and drug therapy for hospitalised patients are considered as candidate predictors. Regarding risk factors associated with mortality and severity, consistent results with many other studies have been found, such as older age, being male, and chronic diseases. Specifically, the hospitalisation (death) rate for those over 69 is 27.2% (19.8%) versus 5.3% (0.7%) for those under 70, and for males is 14.5%(7%) versus 8.3%(4.6%)for females. Among patients with chronic diseases the highest rates of hospitalisation are 26.1% for diabetes and 26.3% for kidney disease, while the highest death rate is 21.9% for cerebrovascular disease. Moreover, specific predictors for different transitions are given, and estimates of the probability of recovery and death for each patient are provided by the model. Some interesting results obtained are that for patients infected at the end of the period the hazard of transition from hospitalisation to ICU is significatively lower (p < 0.001) and the hazard of transition from hospitalisation to recovery is higher (p < 0.001). For patients previously vaccinated against pneumococcus the hazard of transition to recovery is higher (p < 0.001). Finally, internal validation and calibration of the model are also performed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8451995PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0257613PLOS

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