Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci 2022; 26 (5): 1777-1785
DOI: 10.26355/eurrev_202203_28249

Predictors of in-hospital mortality of COVID-19 patients and the role of telemetry in an internal medicine ward during the third phase of the pandemic

R. Nevola, A. Marrone, D. Cozzolino, G. Cuomo, C.P. Romano, L. Rinaldi, C. Aprea, A. Padula, R. Ranieri, K. Gjeloshi, C. Ricozzi, C. Ruosi, S. Imbriani, L.A. Meo, A. Sellitto, F. Cinone, C. Carusone, M. Abitabile, F. Nappo, G. Signoriello, L.E. Adinolfi

Department of Advanced Medical and Surgery Sciences, Internal Medicine COVID Center, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Vanvitelli, University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, Naples, Italy. luigielio.adinolfi@unicampania.it


OBJECTIVE: The first pandemic phase of COVID-19 in Italy was characterized by high in-hospital mortality ranging from 23% to 38%. During the third pandemic phase there has been an improvement in the management and treatment of COVID-19, so mortality and predictors may have changed. A prospective study was planned to identify predictors of mortality during the third pandemic phase.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: From 15 December 2020 to 15 May 2021, 208 patients were hospitalized (median age: 64 years; males: 58.6%); 83% had a median of 2 (IQR,1-4) comorbidities; pneumonia was present in 89.8%. Patients were monitored remotely for respiratory function and ECG trace for 24 hours/day. Management and treatment were done following the timing and dosage recommended by international guidelines.

RESULTS: 79.2% of patients necessitated O2-therapy. ARDS was present in 46.1% of patients and 45.4% received non-invasive ventilation and 11.1% required ICU treatment. 38% developed arrhythmias which were identified early by telemetry and promptly treated. The in-hospital mortality rate was 10%. At multivariate analysis independent predictors of mortality were: older age (R-R for≥70 years: 5.44), number of comorbidities ≥3 (R-R 2.72), eGFR ≤60 ml/min (RR 2.91), high d-Dimer (R-R for≥1,000 ng/ml:7.53), and low PaO2/FiO2 (R-R for <200: 3.21).

CONCLUSIONS: Management and treatment adherence to recommendations, use of telemetry, and no overcrowding appear to reduce mortality. Advanced age, number of comorbidities, severe renal failure, high d-Dimer and low P/F remain predictors of poor outcome. The data help to identify current high-risk COVID-19 patients in whom management has yet to be optimized, who require the greatest therapeutic effort, and subjects in whom vaccination is mandatory.

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R. Nevola, A. Marrone, D. Cozzolino, G. Cuomo, C.P. Romano, L. Rinaldi, C. Aprea, A. Padula, R. Ranieri, K. Gjeloshi, C. Ricozzi, C. Ruosi, S. Imbriani, L.A. Meo, A. Sellitto, F. Cinone, C. Carusone, M. Abitabile, F. Nappo, G. Signoriello, L.E. Adinolfi
Predictors of in-hospital mortality of COVID-19 patients and the role of telemetry in an internal medicine ward during the third phase of the pandemic

Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci
Year: 2022
Vol. 26 - N. 5
Pages: 1777-1785
DOI: 10.26355/eurrev_202203_28249