PLoS Medicine (Jan 2023)

Outcome of COVID-19 in hospitalised immunocompromised patients: An analysis of the WHO ISARIC CCP-UK prospective cohort study.

  • Lance Turtle,
  • Mathew Thorpe,
  • Thomas M Drake,
  • Maaike Swets,
  • Carlo Palmieri,
  • Clark D Russell,
  • Antonia Ho,
  • Stephen Aston,
  • Daniel G Wootton,
  • Alex Richter,
  • Thushan I de Silva,
  • Hayley E Hardwick,
  • Gary Leeming,
  • Andy Law,
  • Peter J M Openshaw,
  • Ewen M Harrison,
  • ISARIC4C investigators,
  • J Kenneth Baillie,
  • Malcolm G Semple,
  • Annemarie B Docherty

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1004086
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
p. e1004086

Abstract

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BackgroundImmunocompromised patients may be at higher risk of mortality if hospitalised with Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) compared with immunocompetent patients. However, previous studies have been contradictory. We aimed to determine whether immunocompromised patients were at greater risk of in-hospital death and how this risk changed over the pandemic.Methods and findingsWe included patients > = 19 years with symptomatic community-acquired COVID-19 recruited to the ISARIC WHO Clinical Characterisation Protocol UK prospective cohort study. We defined immunocompromise as immunosuppressant medication preadmission, cancer treatment, organ transplant, HIV, or congenital immunodeficiency. We used logistic regression to compare the risk of death in both groups, adjusting for age, sex, deprivation, ethnicity, vaccination, and comorbidities. We used Bayesian logistic regression to explore mortality over time. Between 17 January 2020 and 28 February 2022, we recruited 156,552 eligible patients, of whom 21,954 (14%) were immunocompromised. In total, 29% (n = 6,499) of immunocompromised and 21% (n = 28,608) of immunocompetent patients died in hospital. The odds of in-hospital mortality were elevated for immunocompromised patients (adjusted OR 1.44, 95% CI [1.39, 1.50], p 80 years was 99% for men and 98% for women. The study is limited by a lack of detailed drug data prior to admission, including steroid doses, meaning that we may have incorrectly categorised some immunocompromised patients as immunocompetent.ConclusionsImmunocompromised patients remain at elevated risk of death from COVID-19. Targeted measures such as additional vaccine doses, monoclonal antibodies, and nonpharmaceutical preventive interventions should be continually encouraged for this patient group.Trial registrationISRCTN 66726260.