Older people are more likely to die once hospitalised with COVID-19 than with other pneumonia

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Photo by Jair Lázaro on Unsplash
Photo by Jair Lázaro on Unsplash

Once someone over 70 is sent to intensive care with COVID-19, they are more likely to die than if they were sent there with pneumonia caused by other infections, according to Dutch research. The team compared Dutch ICU data from people over 70 years old admitted with COVID-19 during the pandemic to data from those admitted because of bacterial and other viral pneumonia before the pandemic. They found 39.7% of the COVID-19 patients died in the ICU and 47.6% died in the hospital overall, compared with 19.1% and 28.8% respectively for bacterial pneumonia, and 22.7% and 31.8% respectively for viral pneumonia.

News release

From: Wiley

How does COVID-19 compare with bacterial and viral pneumonia for older patients in intensive care?

New research published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society indicates that for older patients in intensive care units (ICUs), COVID-19 is more severe than bacterial or viral pneumonia.

Among 11,525 patients aged 70 years and older who were admitted to Dutch ICUs, ICU-mortality and hospital-mortality rates of patients admitted with COVID-19 were 39.7% and 47.6%, respectively. These rates were higher than the mortality of patients admitted because of pneumonia from causes other than COVID. (ICU- and hospital-mortality rates of patients admitted with bacterial pneumonia were 19.1% and 28.8%, respectively, and with viral pneumonia were 22.7% and 31.8%, respectively). Differences persisted after adjusting for several clinical characteristics and intensive care unit occupancy rate.

“In ICU-patients aged 70 years and older, COVID-19 is more severe—with approximately double mortality rates—compared with bacterial or viral pneumonia. Nevertheless, more than half of these older patients admitted to Dutch ICUs with COVID-19 survived the hospital,” said corresponding author Lenneke E. M. Haas, MD, PhD, of Diakonessenhuis, in the Netherlands. “Our findings provide important additional data to include in informed goals-of-care discussions.”

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conference:
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Diakonessenhuis, The Netherlands
Funder: This research was funded by The Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development (ZonMw) COVID-19 Program in the bottom-up focus area 1 “Predictive diagnostics and treatment” for theme 3 “Risk analysis and prognostics” (project number 10430 012010011: IRIS).
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