Short- and longer-term all-cause mortality among SARS-CoV-2-infected individuals and the pull-forward phenomenon in Qatar: a national cohort study

  • Hiam Chemaitelly
  • , Jeremy Samuel Faust
  • , Harlan M. Krumholz
  • , Houssein H. Ayoub
  • , Patrick Tang
  • , Peter Coyle
  • , Hadi M. Yassine
  • , Asmaa A. Al Thani
  • , Hebah A. Al-Khatib
  • , Mohammad R Hasan
  • , Zaina Al-Kanaani
  • , Einas Al-Kuwari
  • , Andrew Jeremijenko
  • , Anvar Hassan Kaleeckal
  • , Ali Nizar Latif
  • , Riyazuddin Mohammad Shaik
  • , Hanan F. Abdul-Rahim
  • , Gheyath K. Nasrallah
  • , Mohamed Ghaith Al-Kuwari
  • , Adeel A. Butt
  • Hamad Eid Al-Romaihi, Mohamed H. Al-Thani, Abdullatif Al-Khal, Roberto Bertollini, Laith J. Abu-Raddad*
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

21 Citations (Scopus)
41 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Objectives
We assessed short-, medium-, and long-term all-cause mortality risks after a primary SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Methods
A national, matched, retrospective cohort study was conducted in Qatar to assess risk of all-cause mortality in the national SARS-CoV-2 primary infection cohort compared with the national infection-naïve cohort. Associations were estimated using Cox proportional-hazards regression models. Analyses were stratified by vaccination status and clinical vulnerability status.

Results
Among unvaccinated persons, within 90 days after primary infection, the adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) comparing mortality incidence in the primary-infection cohort with the infection-naïve cohort was 1.19 (95% confidence interval 1.02-1.39). aHR was 1.34 (1.11-1.63) in persons more clinically vulnerable to severe COVID-19 and 0.94 (0.72-1.24) in those less clinically vulnerable. Beyond 90 days after primary infection, aHR was 0.50 (0.37-0.68); aHR was 0.41 (0.28-0.58) at 3-7 months and 0.76 (0.46-1.26) at ≥8 months. The aHR was 0.37 (0.25-0.54) in more clinically vulnerable persons and 0.77 (0.48-1.24) in less clinically vulnerable persons. Among vaccinated persons, mortality incidence was comparable in the primary-infection versus infection-naïve cohorts, regardless of clinical vulnerability status.

Conclusions
COVID-19 mortality was primarily driven by an accelerated onset of death among individuals who were already vulnerable to all-cause mortality, but vaccination prevented these accelerated deaths.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)81-90
JournalInternational Journal of Infectious Diseases
Volume136
Early online date15 Sept 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2023

Keywords

  • epidemiology
  • COVID-19
  • acute infection
  • immunity
  • cohort study
  • death
  • Long COVID

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