Journal of Clinical Medicine (Oct 2021)

Pneumothorax and/or Pneumomediastinum Worsens the Prognosis of COVID-19 Patients with Severe Acute Respiratory Failure: A Multicenter Retrospective Case-Control Study in the North-East of Italy

  • Matteo Bonato,
  • Alessia Fraccaro,
  • Nicholas Landini,
  • Giuseppe Zanardi,
  • Cosimo Catino,
  • Francesca Savoia,
  • Nicola Malacchini,
  • Fabiola Zeraj,
  • Piera Peditto,
  • Vito Catalanotti,
  • Elisabetta Marcon,
  • Emanuela Rossi,
  • Alessia Pauletti,
  • Silvia Galvan,
  • Riccardo Adami,
  • Marta Tiepolo,
  • Mauro Salasnich,
  • Maria Cuzzola,
  • Francesca Zampieri,
  • Marcello Rattazzi,
  • Mario Peta,
  • Simonetta Baraldo,
  • Marina Saetta,
  • Giovanni Morana,
  • Micaela Romagnoli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10214835
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 21
p. 4835

Abstract

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Pneumothorax (PNX) and pneumomediastinum (PNM) are potential complications of COVID-19, but their influence on patients’ outcomes remains unclear. The aim of the study was to assess incidence, risk factors, and outcomes of severe COVID-19 complicated with PNX/PNM. Methods: A retrospective multicenter case-control analysis was conducted in COVID-19 patients admitted for respiratory failure in intermediate care units of the Treviso area, Italy, from March 2020 to April 2021. Clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with and without PNX/PNM were compared. Results: Among 1213 patients, PNX and/or PNM incidence was 4.5%. Among these, 42% had PNX and PNM, 33.5% only PNX, and 24.5% only PNM. COVID-19 patients with PNX/PNM showed higher in-hospital (p = 0.02) and 90-days mortality (p = 0.048), and longer hospitalization length (p = 0.002) than COVID-19 patients without PNX/PNM. At PNX/PNM occurrence, one-third of subjects was not mechanically ventilated, and the respiratory support was similar to the control group. PNX/PNM occurrence was associated with longer symptom length before hospital admission (p = 0.005) and lower levels of blood lymphocytes (p = 0.017). Conclusion: PNX/PNM are complications of COVID-19 associated with a worse prognosis in terms of mortality and length of hospitalization. Although they are more frequent in ventilated patients, they can occur in non-ventilated, suggesting that mechanisms other than barotrauma might contribute to their presentation.

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