- Nolan, Margaret B;
- Piasecki, Thomas M;
- Smith, Stevens S;
- Baker, Timothy B;
- Fiore, Michael C;
- Adsit, Robert T;
- Bolt, Daniel M;
- Conner, Karen L;
- Bernstein, Steven L;
- Eng, Oliver D;
- Lazuk, David;
- Gonzalez, Alec;
- Hayes-Birchler, Todd;
- Jorenby, Douglas E;
- D'Angelo, Heather;
- Kirsch, Julie A;
- Williams, Brian S;
- Kent, Sean;
- Kim, Hanna;
- Lubanski, Stanley A;
- Yu, Menggang;
- Suk, Youmi;
- Cai, Yuxin;
- Kashyap, Nitu;
- Mathew, Jomol;
- McMahan, Gabriel;
- Rolland, Betsy;
- Tindle, Hilary A;
- Warren, Graham W;
- Abu-el-rub, Noor;
- An, Lawrence C;
- Boyd, Andrew D;
- Brunzell, Darlene H;
- Carrillo, Victor A;
- Chen, Li-Shiun;
- Davis, James M;
- Deshmukh, Vikrant G;
- Dilip, Deepika;
- Goldstein, Adam;
- Ha, Patrick K;
- Iturrate, Eduardo;
- Jose, Thulasee;
- Khanna, Niharika;
- King, Andrea;
- Klass, Elizabeth;
- Lui, Michelle;
- Mermelstein, Robin J;
- Poon, Chester;
- Tong, Elisa;
- Wilson, Karen M;
- Theobald, Wendy E;
- Slutske, Wendy S
Background
There is mixed evidence about the relations of current versus past cancer with severe COVID-19 outcomes and how they vary by patient and cancer characteristics.Methods
Electronic health record data of 104,590 adult hospitalized patients with COVID-19 were obtained from 21 United States health systems from February 2020 through September 2021. In-hospital mortality and ICU admission were predicted from current and past cancer diagnoses. Moderation by patient characteristics, vaccination status, cancer type, and year of the pandemic was examined.Results
6.8% of the patients had current (n = 7,141) and 6.5% had past (n = 6,749) cancer diagnoses. Current cancer predicted both severe outcomes but past cancer did not; adjusted odds ratios (aOR) for mortality were 1.58 [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.46-1.70] and 1.04 (95% CI, 0.96-1.13), respectively. Mortality rates decreased over the pandemic but the incremental risk of current cancer persisted, with the increment being larger among younger vs. older patients. Prior COVID-19 vaccination reduced mortality generally and among those with current cancer (aOR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.53-0.90).Conclusions
Current cancer, especially among younger patients, posed a substantially increased risk for death and ICU admission among patients with COVID-19; prior COVID-19 vaccination mitigated the risk associated with current cancer. Past history of cancer was not associated with higher risks for severe COVID-19 outcomes for most cancer types.Impact
This study clarifies the characteristics that modify the risk associated with cancer on severe COVID-19 outcomes across the first 20 months of the COVID-19 pandemic. See related commentary by Egan et al., p. 3.