Clinical Epidemiology and Global Health (Jan 2022)

A comparison of clinical outcomes between vaccinated and vaccine-naive patients of COVID-19, in four tertiary care hospitals of Kerala, South India

  • Sabarish Balachandran,
  • Merlin Moni,
  • Dipu T. Sathyapalan,
  • Prinoj Varghese,
  • Manoj P. Jose,
  • Mithun R. Murugan,
  • C. Rajan,
  • Dhanraj Saboo,
  • Sooraj S. Nair,
  • Reshmi Ann Varkey,
  • Parvathy Balachandran,
  • Geetha R. Menon,
  • Beena K. Vasudevan,
  • Amitava Banerjee,
  • Chandrasekhar Janakiram,
  • Jaideep C. Menon

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13
p. 100971

Abstract

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The problem considered: This multi-centric study analyzed data of COVID-19 patients and compared differences in symptomatology, management, and outcomes between vaccinated and vaccine-naive patients. Methods: All COVID-19 positive individuals treated as an in-or out-patient from the 1stMarch to 15th May 2021 in four selected study sites were considered for the study. Treatment details, symptoms, and clinical course were obtained from hospital records. Chi-square was used to test the association of socio-demographic and treatment variables with the vaccination status and binary logistic regression were used to obtain the odds ratio with a 95% confidence interval. Results: The analysis was of 1446 patients after exclusion of 156 with missing data of which males were 57.3% and females 42.7%. 346 were vaccinated; 189 received one dose and 157 both doses. Hospitalization was more in vaccinated (38.2% vs 27.4%); ICU admissions were less in vaccinated (3.5% vs 7.1%). More vaccinated were symptomatic (OR = 1.5); half less likely to be on non-invasive ventilation (OR = 0.5) while vaccine naive patients had 4.21 times the risk of death. Conclusion: Severe infection, duration of hospital stays, need for ventilation and death were significantly less among vaccinated when compared with vaccine naive patients.

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