Comparison of clinical characteristics and disease outcome of COVID-19 and seasonal influenza

Thomas Theo Brehm(Universität Hamburg), Marc van der Meirschen(Universität Hamburg), Annette Hennigs(Universität Hamburg), Kevin Roedl(Universität Hamburg), Dominik Jarczak(Universität Hamburg), Dominic Wichmann(Universität Hamburg), Daniel Frings(Universität Hamburg), Axel Nierhaus(Universität Hamburg), Tim Oqueka(Universität Hamburg), Walter Fiedler(Universität Hamburg), Maximilian Christopeit(Universität Hamburg), Christian Kraef(University of Copenhagen), Alexander Schultze(Universität Hamburg), Marc Lütgehetmann(Universität Hamburg), Marylyn M. Addo(Universität Hamburg), Stefan Schmiedel(Universität Hamburg), Stefan Kluge(Universität Hamburg), Julian Schulze zur Wiesch(Universität Hamburg)
Scientific Reports
March 11, 2021
Cited by 62Open Access
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Abstract

While several studies have described the clinical course of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), direct comparisons with patients with seasonal influenza are scarce. We compared 166 patients with COVID-19 diagnosed between February 27 and June 14, 2020, and 255 patients with seasonal influenza diagnosed during the 2017-18 season at the same hospital to describe common features and differences in clinical characteristics and course of disease. Patients with COVID-19 were younger (median age [IQR], 59 [45-71] vs 66 [52-77]; P < 0001) and had fewer comorbidities at baseline with a lower mean overall age-adjusted Charlson Comorbidity Index (mean [SD], 3.0 [2.6] vs 4.0 [2.7]; P < 0.001) than patients with seasonal influenza. COVID-19 patients had a longer duration of hospitalization (mean [SD], 25.9 days [26.6 days] vs 17.2 days [21.0 days]; P = 0.002), a more frequent need for oxygen therapy (101 [60.8%] vs 103 [40.4%]; P < 0.001) and invasive ventilation (52 [31.3%] vs 32 [12.5%]; P < 0.001) and were more frequently admitted to the intensive care unit (70 [42.2%] vs 51 [20.0%]; P < 0.001) than seasonal influenza patients. Among immunocompromised patients, those in the COVID-19 group had a higher hospital mortality compared to those in the seasonal influenza group (13 [33.3%] vs 8 [11.6%], P = 0.01). In conclusion, we show that COVID-19 patients were younger and had fewer baseline comorbidities than seasonal influenza patients but were at increased risk for severe illness. The high mortality observed in immunocompromised COVID-19 patients emphasizes the importance of protecting these patient groups from SARS-CoV-2 infection.


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