Predictors of mortality in critically ill children hospitalized with laboratory- confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia

Abstract Background Children with COVID-19 infection had fewer severe symptoms, which made it challenging to publish clinical data for this age group. This study aimed to determine the clinical features, laboratory markers, and predictors of mortality in children hospitalized in Pediatric Critical C...

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Main Authors: Rehab Elmeazawy, Ahmed Mohammed Farid EL-Moazen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2024-01-01
Series:The Egyptian Journal of Bronchology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s43168-023-00254-x
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author Rehab Elmeazawy
Ahmed Mohammed Farid EL-Moazen
author_facet Rehab Elmeazawy
Ahmed Mohammed Farid EL-Moazen
author_sort Rehab Elmeazawy
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Children with COVID-19 infection had fewer severe symptoms, which made it challenging to publish clinical data for this age group. This study aimed to determine the clinical features, laboratory markers, and predictors of mortality in children hospitalized in Pediatric Critical Care Units with COVID-19 pneumonia. Methods This retrospective research included all children between the age of ≥ 1 month and 18 years with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia through reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) from nasopharyngeal swabs who were admitted to Pediatric Critical Care Units between January 2022 and December 2022. Results The study included 62 patients with confirmed COVID-19 infection. Out of the 62 patients, 43 (69.4%) survived and 19 (30.6%) succumbed. High-grade fever, cough, altered level of consciousness, convulsion, CO-RADS IV, elevated blood CRP, urea, D-dimer, ferritin, and sodium were linked to significantly higher mortality risk. (OR: 15.867, p = 0.001, OR: 1.543, p = 0.044, OR: 7.321, p = 0.026, OR: 15.00, p = 0.017, OR: 10.833, p = 0.001, OR: 1.015, p = 0.032, OR: 1.028, p = 0.040, OR: 3.315, p < 0.0001, OR: 1.004, p = 0.049, OR: 1.111, p = 0.006 respectively). Conclusion Our study revealed high in-hospital mortality among critically ill children with confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia. Identification of critically ill children with risk factors for death, such as high-grade fever, cough, altered consciousness, convulsion, CO-RADS IV and V, and raised inflammatory markers at the time of admission could minimize excess mortality during COVID-19 waves.
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spelling doaj.art-34757c83a82448a9a15bc3791c017fa32024-01-07T12:14:54ZengSpringerOpenThe Egyptian Journal of Bronchology2314-85512024-01-011811610.1186/s43168-023-00254-xPredictors of mortality in critically ill children hospitalized with laboratory- confirmed COVID-19 pneumoniaRehab Elmeazawy0Ahmed Mohammed Farid EL-Moazen1Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Tanta UniversityDepartment of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar UniversityAbstract Background Children with COVID-19 infection had fewer severe symptoms, which made it challenging to publish clinical data for this age group. This study aimed to determine the clinical features, laboratory markers, and predictors of mortality in children hospitalized in Pediatric Critical Care Units with COVID-19 pneumonia. Methods This retrospective research included all children between the age of ≥ 1 month and 18 years with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia through reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) from nasopharyngeal swabs who were admitted to Pediatric Critical Care Units between January 2022 and December 2022. Results The study included 62 patients with confirmed COVID-19 infection. Out of the 62 patients, 43 (69.4%) survived and 19 (30.6%) succumbed. High-grade fever, cough, altered level of consciousness, convulsion, CO-RADS IV, elevated blood CRP, urea, D-dimer, ferritin, and sodium were linked to significantly higher mortality risk. (OR: 15.867, p = 0.001, OR: 1.543, p = 0.044, OR: 7.321, p = 0.026, OR: 15.00, p = 0.017, OR: 10.833, p = 0.001, OR: 1.015, p = 0.032, OR: 1.028, p = 0.040, OR: 3.315, p < 0.0001, OR: 1.004, p = 0.049, OR: 1.111, p = 0.006 respectively). Conclusion Our study revealed high in-hospital mortality among critically ill children with confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia. Identification of critically ill children with risk factors for death, such as high-grade fever, cough, altered consciousness, convulsion, CO-RADS IV and V, and raised inflammatory markers at the time of admission could minimize excess mortality during COVID-19 waves.https://doi.org/10.1186/s43168-023-00254-xChildrenCOVID-19CriticalMortalityPredictors
spellingShingle Rehab Elmeazawy
Ahmed Mohammed Farid EL-Moazen
Predictors of mortality in critically ill children hospitalized with laboratory- confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia
The Egyptian Journal of Bronchology
Children
COVID-19
Critical
Mortality
Predictors
title Predictors of mortality in critically ill children hospitalized with laboratory- confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia
title_full Predictors of mortality in critically ill children hospitalized with laboratory- confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia
title_fullStr Predictors of mortality in critically ill children hospitalized with laboratory- confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia
title_full_unstemmed Predictors of mortality in critically ill children hospitalized with laboratory- confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia
title_short Predictors of mortality in critically ill children hospitalized with laboratory- confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia
title_sort predictors of mortality in critically ill children hospitalized with laboratory confirmed covid 19 pneumonia
topic Children
COVID-19
Critical
Mortality
Predictors
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s43168-023-00254-x
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AT ahmedmohammedfaridelmoazen predictorsofmortalityincriticallyillchildrenhospitalizedwithlaboratoryconfirmedcovid19pneumonia