COVID-19 in the years 2020 to 2022 in Germany: effects of comorbidities and co-medications based on a large-scale database analysis.

IF 3.6 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH BMC Public Health Pub Date : 2025-02-08 DOI:10.1186/s12889-024-21110-7
Roland Linder, Jonas Peltner, Anatoli Astvatsatourov, Willy Gomm, Britta Haenisch
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Abstract

Background: The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic was a challenge for health care systems worldwide. People with pre-existing chronic diseases have been identified as vulnerable patient groups. Furthermore, some of the drugs used for these chronic diseases such as antihypertensive drugs have been discussed as possible influencing factors on the progression of COVID-19. This study examines the effect of medication- and morbidity-associated risk factors suspected to moderate the disease course and progression of COVID-19.

Methods: The study is based on claims data of the Techniker Krankenkasse, Germany's largest statutory health insurance. The data cover the years 2020 to 2022 and include insured persons with COVID-19 diagnosis from both the outpatient and inpatient sectors and a control of insured persons without COVID-19 diagnosis. We conducted a matched case-control study and matched each patient with an inpatient diagnosis of COVID-19 to (a) 10 control patients and (b) one patient with an outpatient diagnosis of COVID-19 to form two study cohorts. We performed a descriptive analysis to describe the proportion of patients in the two cohorts who were diagnosed with comorbidities or medication use known to influence the risk of COVID-19 progression. Multiple logistic regression models were used to identify risk factors for disease progression.

Results: In the first study period the first study cohort comprised a total of 150,018 patients (13,638 cases hospitalised with COVID-19 and 136,380 control patients without a COVID-19 infection). Study cohort 2 included 27,238 patients (13,619 patients hospitalised with COVID-19 and 13,619 control patients with an outpatient COVID-19 diagnosis). Immunodeficiencies and use of immunosuppressives were strongest risk modifying factors for hospitalization in both study populations. Other comorbidities associated with hospitalization were diabetes, hypertension, and depression.

Conclusion: We have shown that hospitalisation with COVID-19 is associated with past medical history and medication use. Furthermore, we have demonstrated the ability of claims data as a timely available data source to identify risk factors for COVID-19 severity based on large numbers of patients. Given our results, claims data have the potential to be useful as part of a surveillance protocol allowing early-stage access to epidemiological data in future pandemics.

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2020年至2022年德国COVID-19:基于大规模数据库分析的合并症和联合用药的影响
背景:SARS-CoV-2大流行是全球卫生保健系统面临的挑战。已有慢性病的人已被确定为易受伤害的患者群体。此外,一些用于这些慢性疾病的药物,如降压药,已被讨论为可能影响COVID-19进展的因素。本研究探讨了药物和发病率相关危险因素对减缓COVID-19病程和进展的影响。方法:本研究基于德国最大的法定健康保险Techniker Krankenkasse的索赔数据。数据涵盖2020年至2022年,包括门诊和住院诊断为COVID-19的参保人员以及未诊断为COVID-19的参保人员的对照。我们进行了一项匹配的病例对照研究,将每名住院诊断为COVID-19的患者与(a) 10名对照患者和(b) 1名门诊诊断为COVID-19的患者进行匹配,形成两个研究队列。我们进行了一项描述性分析,以描述两个队列中被诊断患有合并症或已知影响COVID-19进展风险的药物使用的患者比例。多逻辑回归模型用于确定疾病进展的危险因素。结果:在第一个研究期间,第一个研究队列共包括150,018例患者(13,638例因COVID-19住院的患者和136,380例未感染COVID-19的对照患者)。研究队列2包括27,238例患者(13,619例住院患者和13,619例门诊诊断为COVID-19的对照患者)。在两个研究人群中,免疫缺陷和使用免疫抑制剂是住院治疗的最强危险调节因素。与住院相关的其他合并症有糖尿病、高血压和抑郁症。结论:我们已经表明COVID-19住院与既往病史和药物使用有关。此外,我们已经证明了索赔数据作为及时可用的数据源的能力,可以根据大量患者确定COVID-19严重程度的风险因素。鉴于我们的研究结果,索赔数据有可能作为监测方案的一部分发挥作用,从而在未来大流行的早期阶段获得流行病学数据。
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来源期刊
BMC Public Health
BMC Public Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.40%
发文量
2108
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: BMC Public Health is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on the epidemiology of disease and the understanding of all aspects of public health. The journal has a special focus on the social determinants of health, the environmental, behavioral, and occupational correlates of health and disease, and the impact of health policies, practices and interventions on the community.
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