Dubai Medical Journal (Apr 2021)

Prediction of Cytokine Storm and Mortality in Patients with COVID-19 Admitted to ICU: Do Markers Tell the Story?

  • Rashid Nadeem,
  • Ashraf Mahmoud Elhoufi,
  • Naheed Elahi Iqbal,
  • Zainab Abdulameer Obaida,
  • Doaa Mohamed Elgohary,
  • Mukesh Kumar Singh,
  • Shymaa Farouk Zoraey,
  • Rami M. Abdalla,
  • Sara Yousif Eltayeb,
  • Crystal Sharon Danthi,
  • Nouha Azaza,
  • Waleed Mohamed Ahmed,
  • Muzammil Hafeez,
  • Maryam AlSada,
  • Fatima Farid Mir

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000514406

Abstract

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Introduction: COVID-19 has caused approximately one million deaths worldwide as of November 24, 2020. Markers of disease activity like ferritin, C-reactive protein (CRP), and D-dimers are frequently monitored to detect the best opportunity for intensive treatment. Methods: All patients of >18 years of age were included. The primary variables of interest, ferritin, CRP, and D-dimers, for each patient throughout hospitalization were recorded. Primary clinical outcomes of length of stay in ICU and survival were recorded. Demographics: age, gender, BMI, and nationality. Ferritin, CRP, and D-dimers were recorded daily if available for the whole ICU stay, and all other variables were recorded on admission day to ICU. Results: The sample includes 235 records. More than 95% of patients have all markers on the day of admission to ICU were ferritin (median 1,278; IQR 1,424), D-dimer 1.21 (3.4), and CRP 129.5 (121). Daily average levels of markers were different from their admission day level: ferritin 1,395 (1,331), D-dimer 3.11 (5.52), and CRP 107 (75.8). Multiple logistic regression analysis determined that average CRP during the stay was the only predictor of survival. Discussion: Data on markers utilization to detect the acute phase of inflammation help clinicians focus on the opportunity window for intensive treatment. Conclusion: Average CRP during the stay in ICU is higher than CRP on admission. Average CRP is the only factor that predicts survival.

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