The age again in the eye of the COVID-19 storm: evidence-based decision making
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Martín, María C; Jurado, Aurora; Abad-Molina, Cristina; Orduña, Antonio; Yarce, Oscar; Navas, Ana M; Cunill, Vanesa; Escobar, Danilo; Boix, Francisco; Burillo-Sanz, Sergio; Vegas-Sánchez, María C; Jiménez-de Las Pozas, Yesenia; Melero, Josefa; Aguilar, Marta; Sobieschi, Oana Irina; López Hoyos, Marcos
Fecha
2021Derechos
Attribution 4.0 International
©Los autores
Publicado en
Immun Ageing
. 2021 May 20;18(1):24
Editorial
BioMed Central
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
COVID-19
Immunosenescence
Lockdown
Immunity
Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors
Cut-off points
Lymphocytes
Area under the curve
Resumen/Abstract
Background: One hundred fifty million contagions, more than 3 million deaths and little more than 1 year of COVID-19 have changed our lives and our health management systems forever. Ageing is known to be one of the significant determinants for COVID-19 severity. Two main reasons underlie this: immunosenescence and age correlation with main COVID-19 comorbidities such as hypertension or dyslipidaemia. This study has two aims. The first is to obtain cut-off points for laboratory parameters that can help us in clinical decision-making. The second one is to analyse the effect of pandemic lockdown on epidemiological, clinical, and laboratory parameters concerning the severity of the COVID-19. For these purposes, 257 of SARSCoV2 inpatients during pandemic confinement were included in this study. Moreover, 584 case records from a previously analysed series, were compared with the present study data.
Results: Concerning the characteristics of lockdown series, mild cases accounted for 14.4, 54.1% were moderate and 31.5%, severe. There were 32.5% of home contagions, 26.3% community transmissions, 22.5% nursing home contagions, and 8.8% corresponding to frontline worker contagions regarding epidemiological features. Age > 60 and male sex are hereby confirmed as severity determinants. Equally, higher severity was significantly associated with higher IL6, CRP, ferritin, LDH, and leukocyte counts, and a lower percentage of lymphocyte, CD4 and CD8 count. Comparing this cohort with a previous 584-cases series, mild cases were less than those analysed in the first moment of the pandemic and dyslipidaemia became more frequent than before. IL-6, CRP and LDH values above 69 pg/mL, 97 mg/L and 328 U/L respectively, as well as a CD4 T-cell count below 535 cells/?L, were the best cut-offs predicting severity since these parameters offered reliable areas under the curve.
Conclusion: Age and sex together with selected laboratory parameters on admission can help us predict COVID-19 severity and, therefore, make clinical and resource management decisions. Demographic features associated with lockdown might affect the homogeneity of the data and the robustness of the results.
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