在COVID-19大流行早期,埃塞俄比亚儿童COVID-19患者的临床特征和结局:一项前瞻性队列研究

IF 1.7 Q2 PEDIATRICS Pediatric health, medicine and therapeutics Pub Date : 2022-05-01 DOI:10.2147/PHMT.S359333
Abate Yeshidinber Weldetsadik, Mahlet Abayneh, Mebratu Abraha, Sisay Sirgu Betizazu, Betregiorgis Hailu Zegeye
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Binary logistic regression and chi-square test were used in the analysis. Results Seventy-nine patients 0–19 years were included from the SPC-19 cohort over 6 months. Pediatric admissions accounted for 11% of cases in the cohort. The mean age (SD) was 6.9 (±6.36) years and 40 (50.6%) were female. The disease was asymptomatic or mild in 57 (72.2%), moderate in 15 (19%), and severe or critical in 7 (8.8%). The commonest presentations in symptomatic children were prostration (26.6%) followed by vomiting (12.7%), fever and cough (11.4% each), and dyspnea (10%). About 53 (67%) children had multimorbidity, and 14 (17.7%) children died. All deaths were in children with comorbidities with tuberculosis and malignancy being associated with 43% of deaths. Nearly 5% of children reported long-COVID symptoms highlighting the need for prolonged follow-up in those children. Conclusion Despite lower admissions and severity, high mortality and morbidity was documented in our pediatric cohort. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

引言大多数先前的儿科新冠肺炎研究报告了儿童较轻的疾病。然而,来自低收入环境的儿科数据有限。我们旨在评估埃塞俄比亚儿科新冠肺炎的特征和结果。设立圣保罗新冠肺炎治疗中心;新冠肺炎三级中心。儿科护理在一个专门的病房提供,但有一个普通的重症监护室。方法圣保罗医院新冠肺炎队列(SPC-19)包括2020年8月至2021年1月住院的新冠肺炎RT-PCR确诊病例。数据是从附在病历表上的病例报告表中提取的,由临床医生完成。将数据上传到Redcap数据库中,并导出到SPSS 20中进行分析。二元逻辑回归和卡方检验用于分析。结果在6个月内,SPC-19队列中包括79名0–19岁的患者。儿科入院占队列病例的11%。平均年龄(SD)为6.9(±6.36)岁,女性40(50.6%)。57例(72.2%)为无症状或轻度,15例(19%)为中度,7例(8.8%)为重度或危重症。症状儿童最常见的表现是虚脱(26.6%),其次是呕吐(12.7%)、发烧和咳嗽(各11.4%)以及呼吸困难(10%)。大约53名(67%)儿童患有多发性疾病,14名(17.7%)儿童死亡。所有死亡都发生在患有结核病和恶性肿瘤合并症的儿童身上,43%的死亡与恶性肿瘤有关。近5%的儿童报告了长期新冠肺炎症状,这突出表明这些儿童需要长期随访。结论尽管入院率和严重程度较低,但在我们的儿科队列中记录了较高的死亡率和发病率。合并症的存在和护理组织的不足可能导致高死亡率。低收入地区的新冠肺炎中心应强调优化对患有新冠肺炎和多发性疾病的儿童的护理,并应考虑为这些儿童接种疫苗,以防止高发病率和高死亡率。
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Clinical Characteristics and Outcome of Pediatric COVID-19 Patients in Ethiopia During the Early COVID-19 Pandemic: A Prospective Cohort Study
Introduction Most previous pediatric COVID-19 studies reported milder disease in children. However, there are limited pediatric data from low-income settings. We aimed to assess the characteristics and outcomes of pediatric COVID-19 in Ethiopia. Setting St. Paul’s COVID-19 treatment center; a tertiary COVID-19 center. Pediatric care was provided in a dedicated ward but with a common ICU. Methods St. Paul’s Hospital COVID-19 cohort (SPC-19) included inpatient COVID-19 RT-PCR confirmed cases from August 2020 to January 2021. Data were extracted from case report forms attached to patient charts and completed by the clinicians. Data were uploaded into the Redcap database and exported to SPSS 20 for analysis. Binary logistic regression and chi-square test were used in the analysis. Results Seventy-nine patients 0–19 years were included from the SPC-19 cohort over 6 months. Pediatric admissions accounted for 11% of cases in the cohort. The mean age (SD) was 6.9 (±6.36) years and 40 (50.6%) were female. The disease was asymptomatic or mild in 57 (72.2%), moderate in 15 (19%), and severe or critical in 7 (8.8%). The commonest presentations in symptomatic children were prostration (26.6%) followed by vomiting (12.7%), fever and cough (11.4% each), and dyspnea (10%). About 53 (67%) children had multimorbidity, and 14 (17.7%) children died. All deaths were in children with comorbidities with tuberculosis and malignancy being associated with 43% of deaths. Nearly 5% of children reported long-COVID symptoms highlighting the need for prolonged follow-up in those children. Conclusion Despite lower admissions and severity, high mortality and morbidity was documented in our pediatric cohort. The presence of comorbidity and inadequate care organization likely contributed to high mortality. COVID-19 centers of low-income settings should emphasize optimizing the care of children with COVID-19 and multimorbidity, and vaccination should be considered in those children to prevent high morbidity and mortality.
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