Development of prognostic models to estimate the probability of lung injury one year after COVID-19-related hospitalization -a prospective study

JOURNAL OF THORACIC DISEASE(2023)

引用 0|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
Background: Long-term effects of SARS-COV-2 infection still under study. The objectives of this study were to identify persistent pulmonary lesions one year after COVID-19 hospitalization and assess whether it is possible to estimate the probability that a patient develops these complications in the future. Methods: A prospective study of >= 18 years old patients hospitalized for SARS-COV-2 infection who develop persistent respiratory symptoms, lung function abnormalities or have radiological findings 6-8 weeks after hospital discharge. Logistic regression models were used to identify prognostic factors associated with a higher risk of developing respiratory problems. Models performance was assessed in terms of calibration and discrimination. Results: A total of 233 patients [median age 66 years (IQR: 56, 74); 138 (59.2%) male] were categorized into two groups based on whether they stayed in the critical care unit (79 cases) or not (154). At the end of follow-up, 179 patients (76.8%) developed persistent respiratory symptoms, and 22 patients (9.4%) showed radiological fibrotic lesions with pulmonary function abnormalities (post-COVID-19 fibrotic pulmonary lesions). Our prognostic models created to predict persistent respiratory symptoms [post-COVID-19 functional status at initial visit (the higher the score, the higher the risk), and history of bronchial asthma] and post-COVID-19 fibrotic pulmonary lesions [female; FVC% (the higher the FVC%, the lower the probability); and critical care unit stay] one year after infection showed good (AUC 0.857; 95% CI: 0.799- 0.915) and excellent performance (AUC 0.901; 95% CI: 0.837-0.964), respectively. Conclusions: Constructed models show good performance in identifying patients at risk of developing lung injury one year after COVID-19-related hospitalization.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Post-acute COVID-19 syndrome, respiratory symptoms, radiological findings, fibrotic pulmonary
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要