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Demographics, Outcomes, and Risk Factors for Patients with Sarcoma and COVID-19: A CCC19-Registry Based Retrospective Cohort Study
- Wagner, Michael J;
- Hennessy, Cassandra;
- Beeghly, Alicia;
- French, Benjamin;
- Shah, Dimpy P;
- Croessmann, Sarah;
- Vilar-Compte, Diana;
- Ruiz-Garcia, Erika;
- Ingham, Matthew;
- Schwartz, Gary K;
- Painter, Corrie A;
- Chugh, Rashmi;
- Fecher, Leslie;
- Park, Cathleen;
- Zamulko, Olga;
- Trent, Jonathan C;
- Subbiah, Vivek;
- Khaki, Ali Raza;
- Tachiki, Lisa;
- Nakasone, Elizabeth S;
- Loggers, Elizabeth T;
- Labaki, Chris;
- Saliby, Renee Maria;
- McKay, Rana R;
- Ajmera, Archana;
- Griffiths, Elizabeth A;
- Puzanov, Igor;
- Tap, William D;
- Hwang, Clara;
- Tejwani, Sheela;
- Jhawar, Sachin R;
- Hayes-Lattin, Brandon;
- Wulff-Burchfield, Elizabeth;
- Kasi, Anup;
- Reuben, Daniel Y;
- Nagaraj, Gayathri;
- Joshi, Monika;
- Polimera, Hyma;
- Kulkarni, Amit A;
- Esfahani, Khashayar;
- Kwon, Daniel H;
- Paoluzzi, Luca;
- Bilen, Mehmet A;
- Durbin, Eric B;
- Grivas, Petros;
- Warner, Jeremy L;
- Davis, Elizabeth J
- et al.
Abstract
Background
Patients with sarcoma often require individualized treatment strategies and are likely to receive aggressive immunosuppressive therapies, which may place them at higher risk for severe COVID-19. We aimed to describe demographics, risk factors, and outcomes for patients with sarcoma and COVID-19.Methods
We performed a retrospective cohort study of patients with sarcoma and COVID-19 reported to the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19) registry (NCT04354701) from 17 March 2020 to 30 September 2021. Demographics, sarcoma histologic type, treatments, and COVID-19 outcomes were analyzed.Results
of 281 patients, 49% (n = 139) were hospitalized, 33% (n = 93) received supplemental oxygen, 11% (n = 31) were admitted to the ICU, and 6% (n = 16) received mechanical ventilation. A total of 23 (8%) died within 30 days of COVID-19 diagnosis and 44 (16%) died overall at the time of analysis. When evaluated by sarcoma subtype, patients with bone sarcoma and COVID-19 had a higher mortality rate than patients from a matched SEER cohort (13.5% vs 4.4%). Older age, poor performance status, recent systemic anti-cancer therapy, and lung metastases all contributed to higher COVID-19 severity.Conclusions
Patients with sarcoma have high rates of severe COVID-19 and those with bone sarcoma may have the greatest risk of death.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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