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Abstract
Clinical and prognostic differences between symptomatic and asymptomatic older patients with COVID-19 are of great interest since frail patients often show atypical presentation of illness. Lung Ultrasound (LUS) has been proven to be a reliable tool for detecting early-phase COVID-19 pneumonic alterations. The current prospective bicentric study aimed to compare LUS score and 3-month overall mortality between asymptomatic and symptomatic older patients with COVID-19, according to frailty status. Patients were stratified according to LUS score tertiles and Clinical Frailty Scale categories. Survival rate was assessed by telephone interviews 3 months after discharge. 64 symptomatic (24 women, aged 80.0 ± 10.8 years) and 46 asymptomatic (31 women, aged 84.3 ± 8.8 years) were consecutively enrolled. LUS score resulted an independent predictor of 3-month mortality [OR 2.27 (CI95% 1.09–4.8), p = 0.03], and the highest mortality rate was observed in symptomatic and asymptomatic pre-frail and frail patients (70.6% and 66.7%, respectively) with greater LUS abnormalities (3rd tertile). In conclusion, LUS identified an acute interstitial lung involvement in most of the older asymptomatic patients. Mortality rate progressively increased according to clinical frailty and LUS score degree, resulting a reliable prognostic tool in both symptomatic and asymptomatic patients.
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Details
1 University Hospital of Pisa, Geriatrics Unit, Department of Clinical & Experimental Medicine, Pisa, Italy (GRID:grid.144189.1) (ISNI:0000 0004 1756 8209); Presidio Sanitario “Anna Torrigiani”, Low Care Unit, Firenze, Italy (GRID:grid.144189.1)
2 University Hospital of Pisa, Geriatrics Unit, Department of Clinical & Experimental Medicine, Pisa, Italy (GRID:grid.144189.1) (ISNI:0000 0004 1756 8209)
3 Presidio Sanitario “Anna Torrigiani”, Low Care Unit, Firenze, Italy (GRID:grid.144189.1)