Implications of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) Infected Hospitalised Patients with Co-Infections and Clinical Outcomes

Author:

Aldali Jehad A.1,Aldali Hamzah J.2ORCID,Aljohani Razan3,Algahtani Mohammad4ORCID,Meo Sultan Ayoub5ORCID,Alharbi Saad6,Al-Afghani Hani4,Aldabaseh Linda Nazmi7,Al Rubai Elham Hamed7,Fallata Abdulaziz7,Zahrani Saleh Abdullah7,Al Zahrani Mohanad Atiah7

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology, College of Medicine, Imam Mohammad Ibn Saud Islamic University, Riyadh 13317, Saudi Arabia

2. Cellular and Molecular Medicine, College of Biomedical Science, University of Bristol, Bristol City BS8 1QU, UK

3. Hematology and Immunology, Faculty of Applied Medical Sciences, Tabuk University, Tabuk City 47512, Saudi Arabia

4. Department of Laboratory and Blood Bank, Security Forces Hospital, Makkah 24251, Saudi Arabia

5. Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, King Saud University, Riyadh 11461, Saudi Arabia

6. Department of Laboratory, Comprehensive Specialized Clinics, Security Forces Hospital, Jeddah 11481, Saudi Arabia

7. Department of Medicine, Security Forces Hospital, Makkah 24251, Saudi Arabia

Abstract

The clinical severity of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection may rise because of acquiring a co-infection during the hospital stay of the patients. The rate of hospital co-infection alongside COVID-19 infection remains low. However, the mortality rates and intensive care unit (ICU) admission remains ambiguous. The present study investigates the implications of COVID-19 hospitalised infected patients with co-infection and the clinical outcomes. In this study, 142 patients were included. The eligible patients who tested positive for COVID-19 infection were hospitalised for more than two days. Each patient’s characteristics and laboratory results were collected, such as who was admitted to the intensive care unit and who was discharged or expired. The results revealed that out of the 142 hospitalised patients, 25 (17.6%) were co-infection positive, and 12 identified types of co-infection: two Gram-positive bacterial infections, one fungal infection and nine Gram-negative bacterial infections. In addition, 33 (23.2%) were ICU admitted, 21 were co-infection negative and 12 were co-infection positive. Among the 12 ICU admitted with co-infection, 33.4% were discharged. The death rate and ICU admission had a p-value < 0.05, indicating statistical significance for co-infected patients compared to non-co-infected patients. It was concluded that co-infection remains very low within hospitalised COVID-19-infected patients but can have severe outcomes with increased ICU admission and increased mortality rates. Thus, implementing infection preventive measures to minimize the spread of hospital-acquired infections among COVID-19 hospitalised patients.

Funder

Deputyship for Research & Innovation, Ministry of Education in Saudi Arabia

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

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