Real life treatment experience and outcome of consecutively hospitalised patients with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia by Omicron-1 vs Delta variants

Efthymia Giannitsioti(National and Kapodistrian University of Athens), Panagiotis Mavroudis(Tzaneion General Hospital), Ioannis Speggos(Tzaneion General Hospital), Antigoni Katsoulidou(National Public Health Organization), Nikos Pantazis(National and Kapodistrian University of Athens), Theodoros Loupis(Biomedical Research Foundation of the Academy of Athens), Ioannis Daniil(Tzaneion General Hospital), Nektaria Rekleiti(Tzaneion General Hospital), Sofia Damianidou(National Public Health Organization), Christina Louka(Tzaneion General Hospital), Chrysanthi Sidiropoulou(Tzaneion General Hospital), Georgios Kranidiotis(Tzaneion General Hospital), Lemonia Velentza(Tzaneion General Hospital), Alexandra Stamati(Tzaneion General Hospital), Maria Kasidiaraki(Tzaneion General Hospital), Efrosini Efstratiadi(Tzaneion General Hospital), Garyfallia Linardaki(Tzaneion General Hospital), Georgios Chrysos(Tzaneion General Hospital), Olympia Zarkotou(Tzaneion General Hospital), Katerina Zoi(Biomedical Research Foundation of the Academy of Athens), Kyriaki Tryfinopoulou(National Public Health Organization), Styliani Gerakari(Tzaneion General Hospital)
Infectious Diseases
July 10, 2023
Cited by 4

Abstract

Background Omicron-1 COVID-19 is less invasive in the general population than previous viral variants. However, clinical course and outcome of hospitalised patients with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia during the shift of the predominance from Delta to Omicron variants are not fully explored.Methods During January 2022 consecutively hospitalised patients with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia were analysed. SARS-CoV-2 variants were identified by a 2-step pre-screening protocol and randomly confirmed by whole genome sequencing analysis. Clinical, laboratory and treatment data split by type of variant were analysed along with logistic regression of factors associated to mortality.Results 150 patients [mean age (SD) 67.2(15.8) years, male 54%] were analysed. Compared to Delta (n = 46), Omicron-1 patients (n = 104) were older [mean age (SD): 69.5(15.4) vs 61.9(15.8) years, p = 0.007], with more comorbidities (89.4% vs 65.2%, p = 0.001), less obesity (BMI >30Kg/m2 in 24% vs 43.5%, p = 0.034) but higher vaccination rates for COVID-19 (52.9% vs 8.7%, p < 0.001). Severe pneumonia (48.7%), pulmonary embolism (4.7%), need for invasive mechanical ventilation (8%), administration of dexamethasone (76%) and 60-day mortality (22.6%) did not significantly differ. Severe SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia independently predicted mortality [OR 8.297 (CI95% 2.080–33.095), p = 0.003]. Remdesivir administration (n = 135) was protective from death both in unadjusted and adjusted models [OR 0.157 (CI95% 0.026-0.945), p = 0.043.Conclusions In a COVID-19 department the severity of pneumonia that did not differ between Omicron-1 and Delta variants predicted mortality whilst remdesivir remained protective in all analyses. Death rates did not differ between SARS-CoV-2 variants. Vigilance and consistency with prevention and treatment guidelines for COVID-19 is mandatory regardless of the predominant SARS-CoV-2 variant


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