Factors associated with deaths due to Covid-19 versus other causes : population-based cohort analysis of UK primary care data and linked national death registrations within the OpenSAFELY platform

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BHASKARAN, Krishnan | BACON, Sebastian | EVANS, Stephen JW | BATES, Chris J. | RENTSCH, Christopher T. | MACKENNA, Brian | TOMLINSON, Laurie | WALKER, Alex J. | SCHULTZE, Anna | MORTON, Caroline E. | GRINT, Daniel | MEHRKAR, Amir | EGGO, Rosalind M. | INGLESBY, Peter | DOUGLAS, Ian J. | MCDONALD, Helen I. | COCKBURN, Jonathan | WILLIAMSON, Elizabeth J. | EVANS, David | CURTIS, Helen J. | HULME, William J. | PARRY, John | HESTER, Frank | HARPER, Sam | SPIEGELHALTER, David | SMEETH, Liam | GOLDACRE, Ben

Background: Mortality from COVID-19 shows a strong relationship with age and pre-existing medical conditions, as does mortality from other causes. We aimed to investigate how specific factors are differentially associated with COVID-19 mortality as compared to mortality from causes other than COVID-19. Methods: Working on behalf of NHS England, we carried out a cohort study within the OpenSAFELY platform. Primary care data from England were linked to national death registrations. We included all adults (aged =18 years) in the database on 1st February 2020 and with >1 year of continuous prior registration; the cut-off date for deaths was 9th November 2020. Associations between individual-level characteristics and COVID-19 and non-COVID deaths, classified according to the presence of a COVID-19 code as the underlying cause of death on the death certificate, were estimated by fitting age- and sex-adjusted logistic models for these two outcomes. Findings: 17,456,515 individuals were included. 17,063 died from COVID-19 and 134,316 from other causes. Most factors associated with COVID-19 death were similarly associated with non-COVID death, but the magnitudes of association differed. Older age was more strongly associated with COVID-19 death than non-COVID death (e.g. ORs 40.7 [95% CI 37.7-43.8] and 29.6 [28.9-30.3] respectively for =80 vs 50-59 years), as was male sex, deprivation, obesity, and some comorbidities. Smoking, history of cancer and chronic liver disease had stronger associations with non-COVID than COVID-19 death. All non-white ethnic groups had higher odds than white of COVID-19 death (OR for Black: 2.20 [1.96-2.47], South Asian: 2.33 [2.16-2.52]), but lower odds than white of non-COVID death (Black: 0.88 [0.83-0.94], South Asian: 0.78 [0.75-0.81]). Interpretation: Similar associations of most individual-level factors with COVID-19 and non-COVID death suggest that COVID-19 largely multiplies existing risks faced by patients, with some notable exceptions. Identifying the unique factors contributing to the excess COVID-19 mortality risk among non-white groups is a priority to inform efforts to reduce deaths from COVID-19. Funding: Wellcome, Royal Society, National Institute for Health Research, National Institute for Health Research Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, UK Medical Research Council, Health Data Research UK.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lanepe.2021.100109

Voir la revue «The Lancet regional health – Europe, 6»

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