key: cord-1019684-ivqmw0dy authors: Smilowitz, Nathaniel R.; Subashchandran, Varun; Yuriditsky, Eugene; Horowitz, James M.; Reynolds, Harmony R.; Hochman, Judith S.; Berger, Jeffrey S. title: Thrombosis in Hospitalized Patients with Viral Respiratory Infections versus COVID-19 date: 2020-11-10 journal: Am Heart J DOI: 10.1016/j.ahj.2020.10.075 sha: bae25a1c5f35fa54e84e12fe94f651b676cb264b doc_id: 1019684 cord_uid: ivqmw0dy BACKGROUND: Thrombosis is a prominent feature of the novel Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The incidence of thrombosis during hospitalization for non-COVID-19 viral respiratory infections is uncertain. We evaluated the incidence of thrombosis in patients hospitalized with non-COVID-19 acute viral respiratory illnesses compared to COVID-19. METHODS: Adults age >18 years hospitalized with a non-COVID-19 viral respiratory illness between 2002-2014 were identified. The primary study outcome was a composite of venous and arterial thrombotic events, including myocardial infarction (MI), acute ischemic stroke, and venous thromboembolism, as defined by ICD-9 codes. The incidence of thrombosis in non-COVID-19 viral respiratory illnesses was compared to the recently published incidence of thrombosis in COVID-19 from 3,334 patients hospitalized in New York in 2020. RESULTS: Among 954,521 hospitalizations with viral pneumonia from 2002 to 2014 (mean age 62.3 years, 57.1% female), the combined incidence of arterial and venous thrombosis was 5.0%. Acute MI occurred in 2.8% of hospitalizations, VTE in 1.6%, ischemic stroke in 0.7%, and other systemic embolism in 0.1%. Patients with thrombosis had higher in-hospital mortality (14.9% vs. 3.3%, p<0.001) than those without thrombosis. The proportion of hospitalizations complicated by thrombosis was lower in patients with viral respiratory illness in 2002-2014 than in COVID-19 (median age 64; 39.6% female) in 2020 (5% vs. 16%; p<0.001) CONCLUSION: In a nationwide analysis of hospitalizations for viral pneumonias, thrombosis risk was lower than that observed in patients with COVID-19. Investigations into mechanisms of thrombosis and risk reduction strategies in COVID-19 and other viral respiratory infections are necessary. SHORT ABSTRACT: We evaluated the incidence of thrombosis in patients hospitalized with non-COVID-19 acute viral respiratory illnesses nationwide from 2012 to 2014 and compared this to the incidence among patients hospitalized with COVID-19 at a large health system in New York. Non-COVID-19 viral respiratory illness was complicated by acute MI in 2.8% of hospitalizations, VTE in 1.6%, ischemic stroke in 0.7%, and other systemic embolism in 0.1%. The proportion of hospitalizations complicated by thrombosis was lower in patients with viral respiratory illness in 2002-2014 than in COVID-19 (5% vs. 16%; p<0.001). Thrombosis is a prominent feature of the novel Coronavirus disease 2019 . (1) Nearly 1 in 6 adults hospitalized with COVID-19 will have arterial or venous thrombosis during hospital admission.(1) Non-COVID-19 viral respiratory infections, including viral influenza, confer excess thrombotic risk after hospital discharge, but the incidence of thrombosis during hospitalization is uncertain. (2) Previous estimates of in-hospital thrombotic risk are based on small series of patients with influenza.(3) Alveolar capillary microthrombi are 9 times as prevalent at autopsy in COVID-19 than in influenza, but there are limited data comparing rates of thrombosis in COVID-19 to non-COVID-19 respiratory viral illnesses.(4) We set out to evaluate the incidence of arterial and venous thrombosis in a cohort of patients hospitalized with non-COVID-19 acute viral respiratory illnesses compared to COVID-19. 16%; Figure) . The present study provides important context for the risks of thrombosis recently observed in patients with COVID-19, which was 3-fold higher than the 5% risk of thrombosis in nearly 1 million hospitalizations for viral pneumonia.(1) This is the largest series to evaluate risks of in-hospital thrombosis among patients with non-COVID-19 respiratory illnesses, a majority of which were due to viral influenza. The incidence of both arterial and venous thrombotic events was elevated in COVID-19 compared to non-COVID-19 respiratory illness, suggesting that mechanisms go beyond immobility associated with hospitalization. Thrombotic risks associated with non-COVID-19 viral pneumonias were similar to the 5.9% incidence previously reported in 119 patients with H1N1 Influenza A.(3) Our analyses is limited by the use of administrative data, which may be subject to reporting bias and coding errors. Antithrombotic and antimicrobial medications were not recorded in the NIS. The time sequence of diagnoses was not documented, and some patients could have been hospitalized for a primary thrombosis that was complicated by nosocomial viral pneumonia. Finally, differential methods of event ascertainment may limit the reliability of comparisons between thrombosis incidence from national administrative data and from our health system. In this nationwide analysis of hospitalizations for viral pneumonias, thrombosis occurred in 5% of cases. Although substantial, this is significantly lower than thrombosis observed in patients hospitalized with COVID-19. Investigations into mechanisms of thrombosis and risk reduction strategies in COVID-19 and other viral respiratory infections are necessary. Thrombosis in Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19 in a New York City Health System Acute Myocardial Infarction after Laboratory-Confirmed Influenza Infection Pandemic H1N1 influenza infection and vascular thrombosis Pulmonary Vascular Endothelialitis, Thrombosis, and Angiogenesis in Covid-19 Outcomes of Acute Myocardial Infarction in Patients with Influenza and Other Viral Respiratory Infections Some patients had >1 type of thrombotic event during hospitalization. ICD-9 diagnosis codes for myocardial infarction: 410.x1; pulmonary embolism: 415.1x Nathaniel R. Smilowitz