New data highlight deadly COVID-19 impact in NYC

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New data highlight deadly COVID-19 impact in NYC

Yesterday, a case series in JAMA of 5,700 COVID-19 patients in New York City hospitals revealed a 9.7% death rate overall—21% when excluding those still hospitalized—and an 88.1% death rate among those requiring mechanical ventilation.

Also, a new study in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), found high rates of COVID-19 infections in residents and staff members at homeless shelters in three cities after clusters were identified, suggesting that regular testing before clusters occur is warranted.

A related study in the same journal found that 35 residents (18%) and 8 staff members (21%) of three affiliated homeless shelters in King County, Washington, were infected with the novel coronavirus from Mar 30 to Apr 11.

Outcomes worse for patients 65 and older, those with diabetes

In the JAMA study, the first known large case series of sequentially hospitalized US COVID-19 patients, researchers studied data from electronic health records from 12 New York City hospitals from Mar 1 to Apr 4.

Of the 2,634 patients who were released from the hospital or died, 14.2% were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU), 12.2% received mechanical ventilation, 3.2% were given dialysis, 2.2% were readmitted (median time to readmission was 3 days), and 21% died.

None of the deaths were in patients younger than 20 years. In those older than 20, death rates were higher for men than for women at every 10-year age interval. The death rate in patients on mechanical ventilation was 76.4% in those 18 to 65 years and 97.2% in those older than 65. The overall death rate in patients 18 to 65 years was 19.8%, while it was 26.6% in older patients.

The most common underlying conditions were high blood pressure (56.6%), obesity (41.7%), and diabetes (33.8%). Median Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) score was 4 points, which corresponds to a 53% estimated 10-year survival and represents a heavy burden of underlying disease.

Of patients who were released from the hospital or died, 16.6% were younger than 50 years and had a CCI score of 0, indicating an estimated 10-year survival rate of 98%; nine of them died. More patients in this group who were older than 65 were treated in the ICU or received mechanical ventilation than younger patients.

Patients older than 65 years released from the hospital were also more likely to be readmitted or released to a nursing home or rehabilitation facility, as opposed to home, than younger patients were.

Patients with diabetes were more likely to receive mechanical ventilation or ICU care and to develop kidney damage than nondiabetic patients.

Median age was 63 years (range, 0 to 107) (median age of those admitted to the ICU was 68), and 39.7% were female. At hospital arrival, 30.7% of patients had a fever, 17.3% had a high respiratory rate of more than 24 breaths a minute, 27.8% received supplemental oxygen, and 2.1% had a respiratory virus co-infection.

Almost all (98.1%) of tests for the novel coronavirus were positive, while 1.9% were negative on the first test.

Testing after cluster identification may be too late

In the first MMWR study, investigators tested 1,192 residents and 313 staff members at 19 nursing homes in four cities in late March and early April.

They found high proportions of COVID-19 infections in three cities’ homeless shelters after clusters had been identified in the shelters: Seattle (17% each of residents and staff in 3 shelters), Boston (36% of residents, 30% staff in 1 shelter), and San Francisco (66% of residents, 16% of staff in 1 shelter).

When only single cases had been identified in 12 Seattle shelters, however, the investigators found low infection rates (5% of residents, 1% of staff). And in 2 shelters in Atlanta, where no cases had been identified in Atlanta in the preceding 2 weeks, only 4% of residents and 2% of staff tested positive.

The authors noted that homeless shelters are ripe for outbreaks because physical distancing is difficult, and many residents are older or have underlying conditions that predispose them to infection and poor outcomes.

“Given the high proportion of positive tests in the shelters with identified clusters and evidence for presymptomatic and asymptomatic transmission of SARS-CoV-2, testing of all residents and staff members regardless of symptoms at shelters where clusters have been detected should be considered,” they said. “If testing is easily accessible, regular testing in shelters before identifying clusters should also be considered.”

Crowded conditions, congregate sleeping

In the second MMWR study, conducting by scientists from the CDC and Seattle, the index COVID-19 patient was a 67-year-old resident of a homeless shelter that provided day services used by residents from two other homeless shelters.

All residents and staff members at all three shelters were offered testing for the virus from Mar 30 to Apr 1. Of the 181 people tested, 19 (10.5%) had positive results (15 residents and 4 staff members). Overall, 62.8% of residents who had spent the night before at each shelter were tested.

When a second round of testing was offered Apr 7 and 8 to those who hadn’t been tested or tested negative, 18 (15.3%) of the 118 those tested had positive results (16 residents and 2 staff members). Another 2 residents tested positive during other screening events, and 2 residents and 2 staff members tested positive after they sought healthcare on their own.

Median age of infected residents was 61 years (range, 50 to 73), and 89% were men. In infected staff members, median age was 39 (range, 28 to 57). Seven residents (20%) were hospitalized, but no deaths were reported in this group. No staff members were hospitalized, and none have died.

Conditions at the shelters were crowded, and sleeping arrangements were congregate. Each night, one two-room shelter housed as many as 40 men and 10 women, who used sleeping mats that were not individually assigned and were stacked during the day. Another shelter housed as many as 110 men in two rooms, while the third shelter housed as many as 100 men in two rooms.

Staff members worked at all three shelters in rotation, and one of the shelters did not have hand sanitizer or showers; instead, residents had to use public transportation to visit public showers.

“Interrupting COVID-19 transmission in homeless shelters is challenging,” the authors wrote. “In settings with known COVID-19 outbreaks, assistance with enforcement of shelter-in-place orders, testing of residents and staff members, and prompt isolation of symptomatic or residents with confirmed disease are needed to prevent further transmission in homeless shelters.”

The CDC recommends that homeless shelters implement infection control measures and physical distancing to ensure that residents’ heads are at least 6 feet apart while sleeping and encourages the use of cloth face masks for all residents.

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