Evolution of COVID-19 mortality over time: results from the Swiss hospital surveillance system (CH-SUR)

M Roelens, A Martin, B Friker, FM Sousa, A Thiabaud… - medRxiv, 2021 - medrxiv.org
M Roelens, A Martin, B Friker, FM Sousa, A Thiabaud, B Vidondo, V Buchter, C Gardiol…
medRxiv, 2021medrxiv.org
Background When comparing the periods of time during and after the first wave of the
ongoing SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19 pandemic in Europe, the associated COVID-19 mortality
seems to have decreased substantially. Various factors could explain this trend, including
changes in demographic characteristics of infected persons, and the improvement of case
management. To date, no study has been performed to investigate the evolution of COVID-
19 in-hospital mortality in Switzerland, while also accounting for risk factors. Methods We …
Background
When comparing the periods of time during and after the first wave of the ongoing SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19 pandemic in Europe, the associated COVID-19 mortality seems to have decreased substantially. Various factors could explain this trend, including changes in demographic characteristics of infected persons, and the improvement of case management. To date, no study has been performed to investigate the evolution of COVID-19 in-hospital mortality in Switzerland, while also accounting for risk factors.
Methods
We investigated the trends in COVID-19 related mortality (in-hospital and in-intermediate/intensive-care) over time in Switzerland, from February 2020 to May 2021, comparing in particular the first and the second wave. We used data from the COVID-19 Hospital-based Surveillance (CH-SUR) database. We performed survival analyses adjusting for well-known risk factors of COVID-19 mortality (age, sex and comorbidities) and accounting for competing risk.
Results
Our analysis included 16,030 episodes recorded in CH-SUR, with 2,320 reported deaths due to COVID-19 (13.0% of included episodes). We found that overall in-hospital mortality was lower during the second wave of COVID-19 compared to the first wave (HR 0.71, 95% CI 0.69 – 0.72, p-value < 0.001), a decrease apparently not explained by changes in demographic characteristics of patients. In contrast, mortality in intermediate and intensive care significantly increased in the second wave compared to the first wave (HR 1.48, 95% CI 1.42 – 1.55, p-value < 0.001), with significant changes in the course of hospitalisation between the first and the second wave.
Conclusion
We found that, in Switzerland, COVID-19 mortality decreased among hospitalised persons, whereas it increased among patients admitted to intermediate or intensive care, when comparing the second wave to the first wave. We put our findings in perspective with changes over time in case management, treatment strategy, hospital burden and non-pharmaceutical interventions. Further analyses of the potential effect of virus variants and of vaccination on mortality would be crucial to have a complete overview of COVID-19 mortality trends throughout the different phases of the pandemic.
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