[HTML][HTML] Clinical presentation, biochemical, and haematological parameters and their association with outcome in patients with Ebola virus disease: an observational …

L Hunt, A Gupta-Wright, V Simms, F Tamba… - The Lancet infectious …, 2015 - thelancet.com
L Hunt, A Gupta-Wright, V Simms, F Tamba, V Knott, K Tamba, S Heisenberg-Mansaray…
The Lancet infectious diseases, 2015thelancet.com
Summary Background Clinical management of Ebola virus disease remains challenging.
Routine laboratory analytics are often unavailable in the outbreak setting, and few data exist
for the associated haematological and biochemical abnormalities. We aimed to assess
laboratory and clinical data from patients with Ebola virus disease to better inform clinical
management algorithms, improve understanding of key variables associated with outcome,
and provide insight into the pathophysiology of Ebola virus disease. Methods We recruited …
Background
Clinical management of Ebola virus disease remains challenging. Routine laboratory analytics are often unavailable in the outbreak setting, and few data exist for the associated haematological and biochemical abnormalities. We aimed to assess laboratory and clinical data from patients with Ebola virus disease to better inform clinical management algorithms, improve understanding of key variables associated with outcome, and provide insight into the pathophysiology of Ebola virus disease.
Methods
We recruited all patients, alive on arrival, with confirmed Ebola virus disease who were admitted to the Kerry Town Ebola treatment centre in Sierra Leone. At admission, all patients had clinical presentation recorded and blood taken for Ebola confirmation using reverse-transcriptase-PCR (RT-PCR) and for haematological and biochemical analysis. We studied the association between these and clinical outcome. The primary outcome was discharge from the Ebola treatment centre.
Findings
150 patients were admitted to the treatment centre between Dec 8, 2014, and Jan 9, 2015. The mean age of patients was 26 years (SD 14·7). Case fatality rate was 37% (55/150). Most patients presented with stage 2 (gastrointestinal involvement, 72/118 [61%]) and stage 3 (severe or complicated, 12/118 [10%]) disease. Acute kidney injury was common (52/104 [50%]), as were abnormal serum potassium (32/97 [33%]), severe hepatitis (54/92 [59%]), and raised C-reactive protein (21/100 [21%]). Haematological abnormalities were common, including raised haematocrit (15/100 [15%]), thrombocytopenia (47/104 [45%]), and granulocytosis (44/104 [42%]). Severe acute kidney injury, low RT-PCR cycle threshold (<20 cycles), and severe hepatitis were independently associated with mortality.
Interpretation
Ebola virus disease is associated with a high prevalence of haematological and biochemical abnormalities, even in mild disease and in the absence of gastrointestinal symptoms. Clinical care that targets hypovolaemia, electrolyte disturbance, and acute kidney injury is likely to reduce historically high case fatality rates.
Funding
None.
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