COVID-19 and cancer: A comparative case series
Author(s) -
Seied Asadollah Mousavi,
Tahereh Rostami,
Azadeh Kiumarsi,
Soroush Rad,
Mohammadreza Rostami,
Fatemeh Motamedi,
Alireza GandomiMohammadabadi,
Amirhossein Mirhosseini
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
cancer treatment and research communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.459
H-Index - 10
ISSN - 2468-2942
DOI - 10.1016/j.ctarc.2021.100339
Subject(s) - medicine , cancer , covid-19 , incidence (geometry) , population , stage (stratigraphy) , lung cancer , mortality rate , retrospective cohort study , sepsis , gastroenterology , paleontology , physics , disease , environmental health , infectious disease (medical specialty) , optics , biology
Background Cancer patients, with an incidence of more than 18 million new cases per year, may constitute a significant portion of the COVID-19 infected population. In the pandemic situation, these patients are considered highly vulnerable to infectious complications due to their immunocompromised state. Material & Methods In this retrospective case series, the documents of solid cancer patients infected by SARS-CoV-2, hospitalized in Shariati hospital between 20 February and 20 April 2020, were evaluated. The diagnosis of COVID-19 was based on laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 and/or features of chest CT scan highly suggestive for SARS-CoV-2. Results A total of 33 COVID-19-infected cancer patients were included. Mean age was 63.9 years, and 54.5% of the patients were male. LDH level was significantly higher (1487.5±1392.8 vs. 932.3±324.7 U/L, P-value=0.016) and also serum albumin was significantly lower in non-survivors (3.6±0.5 vs. 2.9±0.6 g/dL, p-value=0.03). Among 16 patients with stage IV cancer, thirteen patients died, which was significantly higher compared to stage I-III cancer patients (81.3% vs. 18.8% P-value= <0.001). In terms of developing complications, sepsis, invasive ventilation and mortality was significantly higher in patients who received cytotoxic chemotherapy within the last 14 days. Conclusion In this study, we showed that the mortality rate among cancer patients affected by COVID-19 was higher than general population and this rate has a significant correlation with factors including the stage of the disease, the type of cancer, the activity of cancer and finally receiving cytotoxic chemotherapy within 14 days before diagnosis of COVID-19.
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