Black Patients and White Patients With COVID-19

Quick Takes

  • Blacks were over-represented among all patients who died in the hospital in Louisiana.
  • However, black race was not associated with higher in-hospital mortality than white race, after adjustment for sociodemographic and clinical characteristics on admission.
  • Study findings suggest a different immune response to COVID-19 according to race with a possible stronger inflammatory response to pathogens among blacks.

Study Questions:

What are the clinical characteristics and hospital course of laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 among black non-Hispanic and white non-Hispanic subpopulations in Louisiana?

Methods:

The investigators analyzed data from patients seen within an integrated-delivery health system (Ochsner Health) in Louisiana between March 1 and April 11, 2020, who tested positive for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19) on qualitative polymerase-chain-reaction assay. The Ochsner Health population is 31% black non-Hispanic and 65% white non-Hispanic. The primary outcomes were hospitalization and in-hospital death. Outcomes were assessed with unadjusted and multivariable models. Factors that are associated with hospitalization were examined with the use of multivariable logistic regression. Factors that are associated with in-hospital death were investigated with the use of Cox proportional-hazards models.

Results:

A total of 3,626 patients tested positive, of whom 145 were excluded (84 had missing data on race or ethnic group, 9 were Hispanic, and 52 were Asian or of another race or ethnic group). Of the 3,481 COVID-19–positive patients included in the analyses, 60.0% were female, 70.4% were black non-Hispanic, and 29.6% were white non-Hispanic. Black patients had higher prevalences of obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and chronic kidney disease than white patients. A total of 39.7% of COVID-19–positive patients (1,382 patients) were hospitalized, 76.9% of whom were black. In multivariable analyses, black race, increasing age, a higher score on the Charlson Comorbidity Index (indicating a greater burden of illness), public insurance (Medicare or Medicaid), residence in a low-income area, and obesity were associated with increased odds of hospital admission. Among the 326 patients who died from COVID-19, 70.6% were black. In adjusted time-to-event analyses, variables that were associated with higher in-hospital mortality were increasing age and presentation with an elevated respiratory rate; elevated levels of venous lactate, creatinine, or procalcitonin; or low platelet or lymphocyte counts. However, black race was not independently associated with higher mortality (hazard ratio for death vs. white race, 0.89; 95% confidence interval, 0.68-1.17).

Conclusions:

The authors concluded that black race was not associated with higher in-hospital mortality than white race, after adjustment for differences in sociodemographic and clinical characteristics.

Perspective:

This retrospective study reported that although blacks were over-represented among all patients who died in the hospital, black race was not associated with higher in-hospital mortality than white race, after adjustment for sociodemographic and clinical characteristics on admission. Black patients were more likely to have fever on testing or elevated levels of procalcitonin, or C-reactive protein, chronic renal insufficiency at baseline and acute renal failure during hospitalization and possibly a heightened inflammatory response to pathogens. This study suggests that additional studies are needed to better understand the immune response to the novel coronavirus with regard to racial and ethnic differences, other factors that may explain the difference in hospitalizations, and the effect on outcomes.

Clinical Topics: COVID-19 Hub, Prevention, Hypertension

Keywords: African Americans, Coronavirus, COVID-19, Creatinine, Diabetes Mellitus, Ethnic Groups, Hospital Mortality, Hypertension, Inflammation, Obesity, Primary Prevention, Renal Insufficiency, Respiratory Rate, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2


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