Journal of Clinical Medicine (Aug 2022)

Silent Hypoxemia in the Emergency Department: A Retrospective Cohort of Two Clinical Phenotypes in Critical COVID-19

  • Karine Alamé,
  • Elena Laura Lemaitre,
  • Laure Abensur Vuillaume,
  • Marc Noizet,
  • Yannick Gottwalles,
  • Tahar Chouihed,
  • Charles-Eric Lavoignet,
  • Lise Bérard,
  • Lise Molter,
  • Stéphane Gennai,
  • Sarah Ugé,
  • François Lefebvre,
  • Pascal Bilbault,
  • Pierrick Le Borgne

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11175034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 17
p. 5034

Abstract

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Introduction: Understanding hypoxemia, with and without the clinical signs of acute respiratory failure (ARF) in COVID-19, is key for management. Hence, from a population of critical patients admitted to the emergency department (ED), we aimed to study silent hypoxemia (Phenotype I) in comparison to symptomatic hypoxemia with clinical signs of ARF (Phenotype II). Methods: This multicenter study was conducted between 1 March and 30 April 2020. Adult patients who were presented to the EDs of nine Great-Eastern French hospitals for confirmed severe or critical COVID-19, who were then directly admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU), were retrospectively included. Results: A total of 423 critical COVID-19 patients were included, out of whom 56.1% presented symptomatic hypoxemia with clinical signs of ARF, whereas 43.9% presented silent hypoxemia. Patients with clinical phenotype II were primarily intubated, initially, in the ED (46%, p p p p < 0.002) in phenotype II. However, multivariate analysis showed no significant differences between the two phenotypes regarding mortality and hospital or ICU length of stay. Conclusions: Silent hypoxemia is explained by various mechanisms, most physiological and unspecific to COVID-19. Survival was found to be comparable in both phenotypes, with decreased survival in favor of Phenotype II. However, the spectrum of silent to symptomatic hypoxemia appears to include a continuum of disease progression, which can brutally evolve into fatal ARF.

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