Eosinopenia predicts poor outcomes in patients with lung cancer with the omicron variant of COVID-19
Xiao Hu, Jie Tan, Rumei Luan, Dongyan Ding, Ming Yue, Junling Yang, Qianfei Xue

TL;DR
Low eosinophil counts in lung cancer patients with omicron COVID-19 are linked to worse health outcomes and survival.
Contribution
This study identifies eosinopenia as an independent predictor of severity and survival in lung cancer patients with omicron.
Findings
Patients with omicron had lower eosinophil counts compared to others.
Eosinopenia was associated with worse survival and higher disease severity in lung cancer patients with omicron.
Eosinophil count was an independent predictor of outcomes in these patients.
Abstract
Lung cancer is among the malignancies most vulnerable to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Eosinophils have anti-tumor and antiviral effects. Since November 2021, the omicron variant of COVID-19 has become a topic of concern; however, the impact of eosinophils on the severity and outcomes of patients with lung cancer with omicron remains uncertain. This study aimed to utilize eosinophils to predict patient outcomes and guide the prevention and monitoring of omicron. This study performed an analysis of 284 patients with lung cancer who were hospitalized in the second hospital of Jilin University, of whom 83 patients were confirmed to have omicron infection. Depending on the eosinophil counts, patients were divided into two groups: low and high eosinophil counts. The relationship between eosinophil counts and severity and outcomes was then analyzed. We found that omicron, especially…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · COVID-19 and healthcare impacts · Respiratory Support and Mechanisms
