Scientific Reports (Sep 2021)

Prospective postmortem evaluation of 735 consecutive SARS-CoV-2-associated death cases

  • Antonia Fitzek,
  • Julia Schädler,
  • Eric Dietz,
  • Alexandra Ron,
  • Moritz Gerling,
  • Anna L. Kammal,
  • Larissa Lohner,
  • Carla Falck,
  • Dustin Möbius,
  • Hanna Goebels,
  • Anna-Lina Gerberding,
  • Ann Sophie Schröder,
  • Jan-Peter Sperhake,
  • Anke Klein,
  • Daniela Fröb,
  • Herbert Mushumba,
  • Sandra Wilmes,
  • Sven Anders,
  • Inga Kniep,
  • Fabian Heinrich,
  • Felicia Langenwalder,
  • Kira Meißner,
  • Philine Lange,
  • Antonia Zapf,
  • Klaus Püschel,
  • Axel Heinemann,
  • Markus Glatzel,
  • Jakob Matschke,
  • Martin Aepfelbacher,
  • Marc Lütgehetmann,
  • Stefan Steurer,
  • Christoph Thorns,
  • Carolin Edler,
  • Benjamin Ondruschka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-98499-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19), caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), has become a global pandemic with significant mortality. Accurate information on the specific circumstances of death and whether patients died from or with SARS-CoV-2 is scarce. To distinguish COVID-19 from non-COVID-19 deaths, we performed a systematic review of 735 SARS-CoV-2-associated deaths in Hamburg, Germany, from March to December 2020, using conventional autopsy, ultrasound-guided minimally invasive autopsy, postmortem computed tomography and medical records. Statistical analyses including multiple logistic regression were used to compare both cohorts. 84.1% (n = 618) were classified as COVID-19 deaths, 6.4% (n = 47) as non-COVID-19 deaths, 9.5% (n = 70) remained unclear. Median age of COVID-19 deaths was 83.0 years, 54.4% were male. In the autopsy group (n = 283), the majority died of pneumonia and/or diffuse alveolar damage (73.6%; n = 187). Thromboses were found in 39.2% (n = 62/158 cases), pulmonary embolism in 22.1% (n = 56/253 cases). In 2020, annual mortality in Hamburg was about 5.5% higher than in the previous 20 years, of which 3.4% (n = 618) represented COVID-19 deaths. Our study highlights the need for mortality surveillance and postmortem examinations. The vast majority of individuals who died directly from SARS-CoV-2 infection were of advanced age and had multiple comorbidities.