IMPORTANCE COVID-19 is a life-threatening illness for many patients. Prior studies have established hematologic cancers as a risk factor associated with particularly poor outcomes from COVID-19. To our knowledge, no studies have established a beneficial role for anti-COVID-19 interventions in this at-risk population. Convalescent plasma therapy may benefit immunocompromised individuals with COVID-19, including those with hematologic cancers.OBJECTIVE To evaluate the association of convalescent plasma treatment with 30-day mortality in hospitalized adults with hematologic cancers and COVID-19 from a multi-institutional cohort.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTSThis retrospective cohort study using data from the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium registry with propensity score matching evaluated patients with hematologic cancers who were hospitalized for COVID-19. Data were collected between
When the COVID-19 pandemic began, formal frameworks to collect data about affected patients were lacking. The COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19) was formed to collect granular data on patients with cancer and COVID-19 at scale and as rapidly as possible. CCC19 has grown from five initial institutions to 125 institutions with >400 collaborators. More than 5,000 cases with complete baseline data have been accrued. Future directions include increased electronic health record integration for direct data ingestion, expansion to additional domestic and international sites, more intentional patient involvement, and granular analyses of still-unanswered questions related to cancer subtypes and treatments.
Key Points
Question
Among patients with cancer and COVID-19, do non-Hispanic Black patients have more severe COVID-19 at presentation and worse COVID-19–related outcomes compared with non-Hispanic White patients, after adjusting for demographic and clinical risk factors?
Findings
In this cohort study of 3506 patients, Black patients with cancer experienced significantly more severe COVID-19 outcomes compared with White patients with cancer, after adjustment for demographic and clinical risk factors.
Meaning
These findings suggest that, within the framework of structural racism in the US, having cancer and COVID-19 is associated with worse outcomes among Black patients compared with White patients.
Background: The opioid epidemic is a major public health crisis in the United States. Legislators have enacted various strategies to combat this crisis, including the implementation of statewide prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMP). These PDMPs are electronic databases that collect and analyze patient prescription data on controlled substances, allowing physicians to review prior prescriptions before prescribing. The objective of this study was to determine opioid prescribing patterns after the implementation of a statewide PDMP in Pennsylvania.Methods: After IRB approval, PDMP data were obtained from the Pennsylvania Department of Health. Data obtained included: drug name, days supplied, refill count, and partially filled prescriptions. The study timeline was three years, from first quarter 2017 through first quarter 2020.Results: Over the three years post-implementation of a PDMP, Pennsylvania saw a 33% decrease in the overall quantity of opioid pills prescribed (677,194 absolute reduction), a 9% decrease in partially filled prescriptions (5,821 absolute reduction), and an 18% decrease in authorized refills (525 absolute reduction). Opioid prescriptions for greater than seven days of supply decreased by a larger amount than prescriptions for less than seven days of supply (43% vs 27%). Similarly, prescriptions for more than 22 pills saw a greater decrease than prescriptions for less than 21 days (37% vs 21%). However, the rate of decrease in opioid pills prescribed lessened from 14% in the first two years post implementation, to 10% in the third year. The decrease in partially filled opioid prescriptions for the first two years averaged 14% per year, while it increased by 23% in the third year. An 8% average decrease occurred in the rate of refills for opioid prescriptions for the first two years post implementation, followed by a 3% reduction in the third year.Conclusion: There was a 33% decrease in the overall quantity of opioid pills prescribed in the three years after the implementation of the PDMP. The first two years after implementation saw the largest decreases in prescribing habits, which slowed in the third year. More data are needed to show the long-term effects of implementing a statewide PDMP.
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