Affiliation:
1. Department of Internal Medicine (Infectious Disease Division), All India Institute of Medical Sciences,
Rishikesh, India
Abstract
Background:
The COVID-19 pandemic has resurfaced in India as a hardhitting
second wave. This study aims to compare the clinical profile of the first wave
(April-June 2020) and the second wave (March-May 2021) of the severe acute respiratory
syndrome coronavirus-2 pandemic (SARS-CoV-2) in a single tertiary care center in
India.
Methods:
In this retrospective observational study, we examined the demographic profile,
symptoms at presentation, severity of illness, baseline investigations, treatments
received, underlying comorbidities, and outcomes of the COVID-19 patients belonging
to the first (W1) and the second wave (W2) of the pandemic in India.
Results:
The age group affected most in the W2 is 50.5 (17.7) versus 37·1 (16·9) years
for W1. The baseline oxygen saturation is lower in W2, being 84·0 (13·4) % compared
with 91·9 (7·4) % in W1 [SpO2 <90% OR 14.3 (6.1-33), P<0.0001]. 70.2 % of the cases
belonged to the severe category in W2 compared to 37.5% in W1. W2 has worse outcomes.
Incidence of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) [48.7% v/s 6.45%; OR
15.4 (6.5-35.7), P<0.0001], Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) [18% v/s 2.4%; OR 6 (1.7-
22.2), P = 0.005], Acute Liver Injury (transaminitis) [12.8% v/s 6.4%, OR 7.3 (3.7-
14.3), P<0.0001], and deaths (29% v/s 9.6%, standardized mortality ratio 3.5) is higher
in W2. Similarly, the CT severity score for W2 [29.5 (6.7)] was higher than W1 [23·2
(11·5), P<0.05]. The proportion of patients requiring oxygen [81.8% v/s 11.2%; OR 125
(40-333.3), P<0.0001], high flow nasal cannula (HFNC) (11.4% v/s 5.6%), Non-
Invasive Ventilation (NIV) (41.2% v/s 1.5%), invasive ventilation [24.5% v/s 0.9%; OR
22.72 (2.94-166.6), P=0.003], as well as ICU/HDU admissions [56.4% v/s 12.0%; OR
10.5 (5.3-21.2), P<0.0001] was higher for W2 as compared with W1. Cough, invasive
ventilation, inotrope requirement, and ARDS are significantly related to higher mortality
in the W2 than W1.
Conclusion:
Higher age, oxygen requirement, ventilator requirement, ICU admission,
and organ failure are more prevalent in the admitted COVID-19 cases during the second
wave that hit India than in the first wave and are associated with more fatalities. Strategy
for another wave should be planned accordingly.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Drug Discovery
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