[HTML][HTML] Age and Ebola viral load correlate with mortality and survival time in 288 Ebola virus disease patients

J Li, HJ Duan, HY Chen, YJ Ji, X Zhang… - International Journal of …, 2016 - Elsevier
J Li, HJ Duan, HY Chen, YJ Ji, X Zhang, YH Rong, Z Xu, LJ Sun, JY Zhang, LM Liu, B Jin…
International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2016Elsevier
Background A Chinese medical team managed Ebola virus disease (EVD) patients in Sierra
Leone from October 2014 to March 2015 and attended to 693 suspected patients, of whom
288 had confirmed disease. Methods A retrospective study was conducted of the 288
patients with confirmed disease. Clinical symptoms, manifestations, and serum viral load
were analyzed and compared among the different groups for mortality and survival time.
Results Among the 288 confirmed EVD patients (149 male and 139 female, median age 28 …
Background
A Chinese medical team managed Ebola virus disease (EVD) patients in Sierra Leone from October 2014 to March 2015 and attended to 693 suspected patients, of whom 288 had confirmed disease.
Methods
A retrospective study was conducted of the 288 patients with confirmed disease. Clinical symptoms, manifestations, and serum viral load were analyzed and compared among the different groups for mortality and survival time.
Results
Among the 288 confirmed EVD patients (149 male and 139 female, median age 28 years, and median log viral load 6.68), 98 died, 36 recovered, and 154 were lost to follow-up. Common symptoms were fever (77.78%), fatigue (64.93%), abdominal pain (64.58%), headache (62.85%), and diarrhea (61.81%). Compared to patients aged < 18 years, those who were older than 40 years had a higher probability of death (odds ratio 2.855, p = 0.044). Patients with a viral load of >106 copies/ml had a higher case fatality rate than those with <106 copies/ml (odds ratio 3.095, p = 0.004). Cox regression showed that age, viral load, and the presence of diarrhea correlated with mortality.
Conclusion
Patients with a high viral load, of older age, and with diarrhea had a higher mortality and shorter survival time.
Elsevier