Multimorbidity incidence following hospitalization for SARS-CoV-1 infection or influenza over two decades: a territory-wide retrospective cohort study
Cuiling Wei, Chor Wing Sing, Eric Yuk Fai Wan, Ching Lung Cheung, Ian Chi Kei Wong, Francisco Tsz Tsun Lai

TL;DR
This study found no long-term increase in multiple chronic diseases after SARS-CoV-1 hospitalization compared to influenza over 20 years.
Contribution
The study provides long-term evidence on multimorbidity incidence after SARS-CoV-1 and influenza hospitalizations.
Findings
SARS patients had a lower adjusted multimorbidity incidence rate (0.78) compared to influenza patients.
Influenza patients showed increased multimorbidity risk in later years of follow-up.
Subgroup analyses confirmed no higher multimorbidity incidence in SARS patients.
Abstract
An infection of SARS-CoV-1, the causative agent of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), may be followed by long-term clinical sequala. We hypothesized a greater 20-year multimorbidity incidence in people hospitalized for SARS-CoV-1 infection than those for influenza during similar periods. We conducted a retrospective cohort study using a territory-wide public healthcare database in Hong Kong. All patients aged ≥15 hospitalized for SARS in 2003 or influenza in 2002 or 2004 with no more than one of 30 listed chronic disease were included. Demographics, clinical history, and medication use were adjusted for in the inverse-probability-of-treatment-weighted Poisson regression analyses. We identified 1255 hospitalizations for SARS-CoV-1 infection and 687 hospitalizations for influenza. Overall crude multimorbidity incident rates were 1.5 per 100 person-years among SARS patients and 5.6…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChronic Disease Management Strategies · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life
