AUTHOR=Ghobadi Hassan , Mohammadshahi Jafar , Javaheri Nazli , Fouladi Nasrin , Mirzazadeh Yasaman , Aslani Mohammad Reza TITLE=Role of leukocytes and systemic inflammation indexes (NLR, PLR, MLP, dNLR, NLPR, AISI, SIR-I, and SII) on admission predicts in-hospital mortality in non-elderly and elderly COVID-19 patients JOURNAL=Frontiers in Medicine VOLUME=9 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/medicine/articles/10.3389/fmed.2022.916453 DOI=10.3389/fmed.2022.916453 ISSN=2296-858X ABSTRACT=Background

Systemic inflammation indices, including neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio (NLR), monocyte/lymphocyte ratio (MLR), platelet/lymphocyte ratio (PLR), derived neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio (dNLR), neutrophil/lymphocyte*platelet ratio (NLPR), aggregate index of systemic inflammation (AISI), systemic inflammation response index (SIR-I), and systemic inflammation index (SII) are well-expressed inflammatory indices that have been used to predict the severity and mortality of various inflammatory diseases. This study aimed to investigate the role of systemic inflammatory markers in predicting mortality in non-elderly and elderly COVID-19 patients.

Methods

In a retrospective study, laboratory parameters were examined for 1,792 COVID-19 patients (elderly = 710 and non-elderly = 1,082). The ability of inflammatory markers to distinguish the severity of COVID-19 was determined by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis, and survival probability was determined by the mean of Kaplan–Meier curves, with the endpoint being death.

Results

In the non-survivor non-elderly and elderly patients, the parameters PLR, MLR, dNLR, NLPR, AISI, SIR-I, and SII were significantly higher than in the surviving patients. WBC count (HR = 4.668, 95% CI = 1.624 to 13.413, P < 0.01), neutrophil count (HR = 6.395, 95% CI = 2.070 to 19.760, P < 0.01), dNLR (HR = 0.390, 95% CI = 0.182 to 0.835, P < 0.05), and SII (HR = 10.725, 95% CI = 1.076 to 106.826, P < 0.05) were significantly associated with survival. On the other hand, in elderly patients, it was found that WBC count (HR = 4.076, 95% CI = 2.176 to 7.637, P < 0.001) and neutrophil count (HR = 2.412, 95% CI = 1.252 to 4.647, P < 0.01) were significantly associated with survival.

Conclusion

WBC count and neutrophil count in non-elderly and elderly patients, were reliable predictors of mortality.