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Clinical characteristics of “re-positive” discharged COVID-19 pneumonia patients in Wuhan, China

Shengyang He, Kefu Zhou, Mengyun Hu, Chunying Liu, Lihua Xie, Shenghua Sun, Wenwu Sun, Liangkai Chen

2020Scientific Reports25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To analyze the clinical characteristics of re-positive discharged COVID-19 patients and find distinguishing markers. The demographic features, clinical symptoms, laboratory results, comorbidities, co-infections, treatments, illness severities and chest CT scan results of 267 patients were collected from 1st January to 15th February 2020. COVID-19 was diagnosed by RT-PCR. Clinical symptoms and nucleic acid test results were collected during the 14 days post-hospitalization quarantine. 30 out of 267 COVID-19 patients were detected re-positive during the post-hospitalization quarantine. Re-positive patients could not be distinguished by demographic features, clinical symptoms, laboratory results, comorbidities, co-infections, treatments, chest CT scan results or subsequent clinical symptoms. However, re-positive rate was found to be correlated to illness severity, according the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II (APACHE II) severity-of-disease classification system, and the confusion, urea, respiratory rate and blood pressure (CURB-65) score. Common clinical characteristics were not able to distinguish re-positive patients. However, severe and critical cases classified high according APACHE II and CURB-65 scores, were more likely to become re-positive after discharge.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)PneumoniaInternal medicineConfusionSeverity of illnessSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)DiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)PsychoanalysisPsychologyCOVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesLong-Term Effects of COVID-19COVID-19 diagnosis using AI