Clinical characteristics and risk factors of severe COVID-19 in hospitalized neonates with omicron variant infection: a retrospective study
Huijing Wei, Fu Wei, Xiaokang Peng, Pan Liu, Li Tang, Yishan Liu, Shan Liao, Yajing Bo, Yuzhen Zhao, Ruina Li, Xiaoguai Liu, Fanpu Ji

TL;DR
This study examines the clinical features and risk factors for severe Omicron variant-induced COVID-19 in hospitalized neonates, finding that low neutrophil and lymphocyte counts are strong indicators of severity.
Contribution
Identifies novel risk factors for severe neonatal Omicron-related COVID-19 using logistic regression and ROC analysis.
Findings
Gestational age, neutrophil count, and lymphocyte count are independent risk factors for severe neonatal Omicron-induced COVID-19.
Combined neutrophil and lymphocyte counts show high accuracy in predicting severe disease (AUC: 0.912).
Most neonates with Omicron-induced COVID-19 had mild symptoms, with few requiring respiratory support.
Abstract
Reports on coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in neonates are limited, especially in patients infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-COV-2) Omicron variant. This study aims to analyze the clinical characteristics and identify risk factors associated with severe COVID-19 in neonates infected with Omicron variant. The study population was represented by neonates with COVID-19, who were admitted to The Affiliated Children’s Hospital of Xi’an Jiaotong University in northwest China, from December 10, 2022 to January 20, 2023. Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced that all local COVID-19 cases were infected with Omicron variant during the study period. Clinical and laboratory data were collected retrospectively. We used logistic regression analysis to investigate the risk factors for severe COVID-19, and derived odds ratios (ORs) and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research · COVID-19 Impact on Reproduction
