Leukopenia and leukocytosis as strong predictors of COVID‐19 severity: A cross‐sectional study of the hematologic abnormalities and COVID‐19 severity in hospitalized patients

Author:

Sharafi Fateme1,Jafarzadeh Esfehani Reza2,Moodi Ghalibaf AmirAli3ORCID,Jarahi Lida4,Shamshirian Ali5,Mozdourian Mahnaz6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine Mashhad University of Medical Science Mashhad Iran

2. Blood Born Infections Research Center, Academic Center for Education Culture and Research (ACECR)—Khorasan Razavi Mashhad Iran

3. Student Research Committee, Faculty of Medicine Birjand University of Medical Sciences Birjand Iran

4. Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine Mashhad University of Medical Sciences Mashhad Iran

5. Student Research Committee, Faculty of Medicine Mashhad University of Medical Sciences Mashhad Iran

6. Lung Diseases Research Center Mashhad University of Medical Science Mashhad Iran

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsPredicting severe disease is important in provocative decision‐making for the management of patients with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19); However, there are still some controversies about the COVID‐19's severity predicting factors. This study aimed to investigate the relationships between clinical and laboratory findings regarding COVID‐19's severity in patients admitted to a tertiary hospital in Mashhad, Iran.MethodsA cross‐sectional study was conducted on patients with documented COVID‐19 infection based on the reverse transcription‐polymerase chain reaction test. Clinical symptoms, vital signs, and medical history of the patients were recorded from their medical records. Laboratory findings and computed tomography (CT) study findings were documented. Disease severity was defined based on CT scan findings.ResultsA total of 564 patients (58.8 ± 16.8 years old) were evaluated. The frequency of severe disease was 70.4%. There was a significant difference in heart rate (p = 0.0001), fever (p = 0.002), dyspnea (p = 0.0001), chest pain (p = 0.0001), diarrhea (p = 0.021), arthralgia (p = 0.0001), and chills (p = 0.044) as well as lymphopenia (p = 0.014), white blood cell count (p = 0.001), neutrophil count (p < 0.0001), lymphocyte count (p < 0.0001), and prothrombin time (p = 0.001) between disease severity groups. Predictors of severe COVID‐19 were pulse rate (crude odds ratio [cOR] = 1.014, 95% confidence interval [CI] for cOR: 1.001, 1.027) and leukopenia (cOR = 3.910, 95% CI for cOR: 1.294, 11.809). Predictors for critical COVID‐19 were pulse rate (cOR = 1.075, 95% CI for cOR: 1.046, 1.104), fever (cOR = 2.516, 95%CI for cOR: 1.020, 6.203), dyspnea (cOR = 4.190, 95% CI for cOR: 1.227, 14.306), and leukocytosis (cOR = 3.866, 95% CI for cOR: 1.815, 8.236).ConclusionsLeukopenia and leukocytosis have the strongest correlation with the COVID‐19 severity. These findings could be a valuable guild for clinicians in COVID‐19 patient management in the inpatient setting.

Funder

Mashhad University of Medical Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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