A population-scale temporal case-control evaluation of COVID-19 disease phenotype and related outcome rates in patients with cancer in England (UKCCP)
Author
Starkey, ThomasIonescu, Maria C
Tilby, Michael
Little, Martin
Burke, Emma
Fittall, Matthew W
Khan, Sam
Liu, Justin K H
Platt, James R
Mew, Rosie
Tripathy, Arvind R
Watts, Isabella
Williams, Sophie Therese
Appanna, Nathan
Al-Hajji, Youssra
Barnard, Matthew
Benny, Liza
Burnett, Alexander
Bytyci, Jola
Cattell, Emma L
Cheng, Vinton
Clark, James J
Eastlake, Leonie
Gerrand, Kate
Ghafoor, Qamar
Grumett, Simon
Harper-Wynne, Catherine
Kahn, Rachel
Lee, Alvin J X
Lomas, Oliver
Lydon, Anna
McKenzie, Hayley
Panneerselvam, Hari
Pascoe, Jennifer S
Patel, Grisma
Patel, Vijay
Potter, Vanessa A
Randle, Amelia
Rigg, Anne S
Robinson, Tim M
Roylance, Rebecca
Roques, Tom W
Rozmanowski, Stefan
Roux, René L
Shah, Ketan
Sheehan, Remarez
Sintler, Martin
Swarup, Sanskriti
Taylor, Harriet
Tillett, Tania
Tuthill, Mark
Williams, Sarah
Ying, Yuxin
Beggs, Andrew
Iveson, Tim
Lee, Siow Ming
Middleton, Gary
Middleton, Mark
Protheroe, Andrew
Fowler, Tom
Johnson, Peter
Lee, Lennard Y W
Publication date
2023-07-25
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Patients with cancer are at increased risk of hospitalisation and mortality following severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. However, the SARS-CoV-2 phenotype evolution in patients with cancer since 2020 has not previously been described. We therefore evaluated SARS-CoV-2 on a UK populationscale from 01/11/2020-31/08/2022, assessing case-outcome rates of hospital assessment(s), intensive care admission and mortality. We observed that the SARS-CoV-2 disease phenotype has become less severe in patients with cancer and the non-cancer population. Case-hospitalisation rates for patients with cancer dropped from 30.58% in early 2021 to 7.45% in 2022 while case-mortality rates decreased from 20.53% to 3.25%. However, the risk of hospitalisation and mortality remains 2.10x and 2.54x higher in patients with cancer, respectively. Overall, the SARS-CoV-2 disease phenotype is less severe in 2022 compared to 2020 but patients with cancer remain at higher risk than the non-cancer population. Patients with cancer must therefore be empowered to live more normal lives, to see loved ones and families, while also being safeguarded with expanded measures to reduce the risk of transmission.Citation
Sci Rep. 2023 Jul 25;13(1):11327Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10368624/PMID
37491478Journal
Scientific ReportsPublisher
Nature Publishing Groupae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1038/s41598-023-36990-9