Risk factors associated with asymptomatic hypoxemia among COVID-19 patients: a retrospective study using the nationwide Japanese registry, COVIREGI-JP

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jiph.2022.01.014Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Abstract

Deaths of home-care patients with coronavirus disease (COVID-19) have become a social problem. One of their causes is hypoxemia without dyspnea which delays seeking medical attention.

This was a retrospective study including patients registered in the COVID-19 Registry Japan, in which hospitalized patients with COVID-19 in 227 participating healthcare facilities were enrolled. The enrolled patients were divided into two groups: non-dyspneic patients with a peripheral capillary oxygen saturation (SpO2) ≤ 93% on admission (the hypoxemia without dyspnea group) and non-dyspneic patients with an SpO2> 93% (the control group). We conducted a multivariate logistic regression analysis to identify the factors associated with hypoxemia without dyspnea.

21544 patients were enrolled, 1035 (4.8%) patients were in the hypoxemia without dyspnea group, and 20509 (95.2%) patients were in the control group. The median respiratory rate (RR) of the hypoxemia without dyspnea group was higher than that of the control group (31/min vs. 18/min, p < 0.001). Age> 65, male, body mass index> 25, smoking, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, other chronic lung disease, and diabetes mellitus were the independent factors associated with hypoxemia without dyspnea. Patients with those background should be closely monitored. RR is an important indicator of hypoxemia, even in the absence of dyspnea.

Keywords

COVID-19
Silent hypoxia
Risk factors
Respiratory rate
Registry

Cited by (0)