Heliyon (Aug 2024)

Relationship between creatinine–cystatin C ratio and all-cause mortality in hospitalized patients with COVID-19: A prospective study in China

  • Dong Wu,
  • Jiahao Cao,
  • Yiyan Lin,
  • Xiaoer Chen,
  • Bingyu Long,
  • Bangxiao Huang,
  • Gege Liu,
  • Xiaofang Fu,
  • Bin Wu,
  • Dan Huang,
  • Yuanli Zhang,
  • Duolao Wang,
  • Xuanna Zhao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 15
p. e35587

Abstract

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Background: This study was conducted to investigate whether baseline creatinine–cystatin C ratio is associated with all-cause mortality in adult Chinese patients hospitalized with coronavirus disease 2019. Methods: This study included 933 patients with coronavirus disease 2019 who were admitted to The Affiliated Hospital of Guangdong Medical University between December 2022 and March 2023. All-cause mortality was determined by telephone follow-up after 28 days. Multivariate Cox proportional risk models were used to investigate the relationship between baseline creatinine–cystatin C ratio and all-cause mortality. Restricted cubic spline and two-piecewise Cox proportional hazards risk models were used to identify non-linear correlations. Results: Of the 933 patients, 128 died during the 28 days follow-up. The restricted cubic spline analysis of hospitalized patients with coronavirus disease 2019 revealed an L-shaped association between baseline creatinine–cystatin C ratio and all-cause mortality, with a threshold creatinine–cystatin C ratio of ≤0.93 predicting all-cause mortality. Specifically, a baseline creatinine–cystatin C ratio below this threshold value was negatively correlated with mortality (hazard ratio 0.12, 95 % confidence interval 0.03–0.48), but a creatinine–cystatin C ratio >0.93 was not correlated with mortality (hazard ratio 1.29, 95 % confidence interval 0.65–2.55). Conclusions: In Chinese adult patients hospitalized with coronavirus disease 2019, an L-shaped relationship was observed between the baseline creatinine–cystatin C ratio and all-cause mortality.

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