This is a case series of patients with COVID-19 admitted to the largest university hospital in Sao Paulo, Brazil, during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. Data will be collected prospectively and retrospectively. The main objective is to describe the characteristics of critically ill patients with COVID-19 and their clinical outcomes, and to identify risk factors associated with survival, to inform clinical decision-making and to guide the strategy to mitigate the epidemic, both within each hospital and ICU and in public health management.
In December 2019, an outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) attributed to a new coronavirus, called SARS-CoV-2, was described in the Wuhan region of China. This SARS, caused by SARS-CoV-2 was called COVID-19, spread across the globe, causing millions of cases on all continents, and thousands of deaths, being characterized as a pandemic. COVID-19 is characterized by a flu-like syndrome, with symptoms such as fever, cough, myalgia and gastrointestinal symptoms. Most cases are mild, some even asymptomatic, but approximately 15% of patients have more severe presentation, and approximately 5% are critical (7). The acute respiratory failure of critically ill patients with COVID-19 has different aspects, including hypoxemia of difficult treatment, associated in some cases with clotting disorders, changes in immunity and inflammatory phenomena that pose challenges for the management of these patients, whose mortality can be high. The Hospital das Clínicas da Faculdade de Medicina de São Paulo implemented an action plan that provides for the creation of 200 ICU beds to serve patients with COVID-19. Knowing the characteristics of critically ill patients with COVID-19 and their clinical outcomes is extremely important to inform clinical decision-making and to guide the strategy to mitigate the epidemic, both within each hospital and ICU and in public health management.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,589
This is an observational study, so there are no interventions. Investigators will collect data about demographics, comorbidities, and other risk factors such as severity of disease at admission, need for advanced life support, need for invasive mechanical ventilation and ventilator parameters on day1 of mechanical ventilation or ICU admission as potentially association with survival
Hospital das Clínicas -HCFMUSP
São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
ICU survival at 28 days
the proportion of patients who survive to ICU discharge or for 28 days in the ICU
Time frame: 28 days
Hospital survival at 60 days
the proportion of patients who survive to hospital discharge or for 60 days in the hospital
Time frame: 60 days
Duration of mechanical ventilation
Number of days under invasive ventilatory support
Time frame: 28 days
Need for renal replacement therapy
Proportion of patients who received renal replacement therapy during the ICU stay
Time frame: 28 days
Complications during the ICU stay
percentage of patients who developed complications during the ICU stay: thromboembolic events, ventilator associated pneumonia, secondary infections, cardiovascular complications
Time frame: 28 days
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