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Outcome Stratified Analysis of Biomarker Trajectories for Patients With SARS-CoV-2 Infection

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Title

Outcome Stratified Analysis of Biomarker Trajectories for Patients With SARS-CoV-2 Infection

Subject

Description

Longitudinal trajectories of vital signs and biomarkers during admission remain poorly characterized for COVID-19 patients despite their potential to provide critical insights about disease progression. We studied 1884 patients with SARS-CoV2 infection from 3/4/2020-6/25/2020 within one Maryland hospital system and used a retrospective longitudinal framework with linear mixed-effects models to investigate relevant biomarker trajectories leading up to three critical outcomes: mechanical ventilation, discharge, and death.

Date

2021-05-12

Citation

Bowring, Mary G., Zitong Wang, Yizhen Xu, Joshua Betz, John Muschelli, Brian T. Garibaldi, and Scott L. Zeger. 2021. "Outcome Stratified Analysis of Biomarker Trajectories for Patients With SARS-CoV-2 Infection." American Journal of Epidemiology.

Abstract

Longitudinal trajectories of vital signs and biomarkers during admission remain poorly characterized for COVID-19 patients despite their potential to provide critical insights about disease progression. We studied 1884 patients with SARS-CoV2 infection from 3/4/2020-6/25/2020 within one Maryland hospital system and used a retrospective longitudinal framework with linear mixed-effects models to investigate relevant biomarker trajectories leading up to three critical outcomes: mechanical ventilation, discharge, and death. Trajectories of four vital signs (respiratory rate, SpO2/FiO2, pulse, and temperature) and four lab values (C-reactive protein (CRP), absolute lymphocyte count (ALC), estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), and D-dimer) clearly distinguished the trajectories of COVID-19 patients. Prior to any ventilation, log-CRP, log-ALC, respiratory rate, and SpO2/FiO2 trajectories diverge approximately 8-10 days before discharge or death. Following ventilation, log-CRP, log-ALC, respiratory rate, SpO2/FiO2, and eGFR trajectories again diverge 10-20 days prior to death or discharge. Trajectories improved until discharge and remained unchanged or worsened until death. Our approach characterizes the distribution of biomarker trajectories leading up to competing outcomes of discharge versus death. Moving forward, this model can contribute to quantifying the joint probability of future biomarkers and outcomes provided clinical data up to a given moment.

Keywords: COVID-19; case-control design; linear mixed effects models; longitudinal data.

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Free online on Oxford Academic, © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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