Non-Ventilated Patients with Spontaneous Pneumothorax or Pneumomediastinum Associated with COVID-19: Three-Year Debriefing across Five Pandemic Waves

Author:

Marza Adina Maria12ORCID,Cindrea Alexandru Cristian3ORCID,Petrica Alina14,Stanciugelu Alexandra Valentina25,Barsac Claudiu16,Mocanu Alexandra7,Critu Roxana5,Botea Mihai Octavian8ORCID,Trebuian Cosmin Iosif1,Lungeanu Diana910ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, “Victor Babes” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 300041 Timisoara, Romania

2. Emergency Department, Emergency Clinical Municipal Hospital, 300079 Timisoara, Romania

3. Faculty of Medicine, “Victor Babes” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 300041 Timisoara, Romania

4. Emergency Department, “Pius Brinzeu” Emergency Clinical County Hospital, 300736 Timisoara, Romania

5. Doctoral School, “Victor Babes” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 300041 Timisoara, Romania

6. Clinic of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, “Pius Brinzeu” Emergency Clinical County Hospital, 300736 Timisoara, Romania

7. Department of Infectious Diseases, “Victor Babes” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 300041 Timisoara, Romania

8. Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, University of Oradea, 410087 Oradea, Romania

9. Center for Modeling Biological Systems and Data Analysis, “Victor Babes” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 300041 Timisoara, Romania

10. Department of Functional Sciences, “Victor Babes” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 300041 Timisoara, Romania

Abstract

Spontaneous pneumothorax and pneumomediastinum (SP–SPM) are relatively rare medical conditions that can occur with or independently of COVID-19. We conducted a retrospective analysis of SP–SPM cases presented to the emergency departments (EDs) of two University-affiliated tertiary hospitals from 1 March 2020 to 31 October 2022. A total of 190 patients were identified: 52 were COVID-19 cases, and 138 were non-COVID-19 cases. The primary outcome we were looking for was in-hospital mortality. The secondary outcomes concerned the disease severity assessed by (a) days of hospitalization; (b) required mechanical ventilation (MV); and (c) required intensive care (IC). All were investigated in the context of the five pandemic waves and the patients’ age and comorbidities. The pandemic waves had no significant effect on the outcomes of these patients. Logistic regression found age (OR = 1.043; 95%CI 1.002–1.085), COVID-19 (OR = 6.032; 95%CI 1.757–20.712), number of comorbidities (OR = 1.772; 95%CI 1.046–3.001), and ground-glass opacities over 50% (OR = 5.694; 95%CI 1.169–27.746) as significant risk predictors of in-hospital death while controlling for gender, smoking, the pandemic wave, and the extension of SP–SPM. The model proved good prediction performance (Nagelkerke R-square = 0.524) and would hold the same significant predictors for MV and IC.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Medicine (miscellaneous)

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