Characteristics of pediatric patients hospitalized with COVID-19 during the third wave (omicron variant) at a referral hospital in Peru
Giancarlo Alvarado-Gamarra, Vanessa Zarate-Campos, Jimena A. Saavedra Díaz, Renato M. Sánchez Julca, Andrea Tahua Vega, Aida Borcic, Alvaro Taype-Rondan, Luis Miguel Franchi Prato, Claudio F. Lanata, Jesús Dominguez-Rojas, Raquel Garcés-Ghilardi, Matilde Estupiñan-Vigil

TL;DR
This study describes the hospitalization patterns and outcomes of children with COVID-19 during the omicron wave in Peru.
Contribution
The study provides insights into pediatric hospitalizations during the omicron wave in Peru, highlighting trends and treatment patterns.
Findings
Hospitalizations increased rapidly during the omicron wave compared to previous waves.
Most patients had favorable outcomes, with a small percentage requiring intensive care or ventilation.
Antibiotics and corticosteroids were the most commonly used drugs during hospitalization.
Abstract
This study aimed to describe the characteristics of pediatric patients (28 days to 14 years of age) hospitalized with COVID-19 during the third wave of the pandemic (omicron variant) at the Hospital Nacional Edgardo Rebagliati Martins (HNERM) (Lima, Peru). In this retrospective cohort, we reviewed the medical records of 122 pediatric patients who attended HNERM between January and early April 2022 (55% male, median age: 5 years); 77.9% attended HNERM during the first month, and half of them had some comorbidity. Participants were hospitalized mainly for respiratory distress, decompensated comorbidity, and dehydration. Of the participants, 6.6% were admitted to intensive care, 4.9% to invasive mechanical ventilation, 5.7% required some vasoactive agent and 1.6% died. The most commonly used drugs were antibiotics (43.4%) and corticosteroids (27.1%). In conclusion, hospitalizations rapidly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRespiratory Support and Mechanisms · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · Family and Patient Care in Intensive Care Units
