Background: COVID-19 pandemic research efforts have mainly focused on adults, but data in paediatric populations are sparse.
Methods: We used the German nationwide-inpatient-sample analysing all hospitalised children ≤18years with confirmed COVID-19-diagnosis in Germany during the year 2020, stratified for ICU admission.
Results: Overall, 3,360 hospitalization-cases of children ≤18years with COVID-19-infection were diagnosed in Germany 2020 (median age 7.0 [IQR 0.0-15.0]years, 49.8% female); among them 4.3% were admitted on ICU. In-hospital death occurred in five patients with and three without ICU admission (3.5% vs. 0.1%, P<0.001) and ICU admission was independently associated with increased case-fatality (OR 21.573 [95%CI 4.191-111.044],P<0.001). Obesity (OR 3.419 [95%CI 1.300-8.993],P=0.013), diabetes mellitus (OR 6.929 [95%CI 3.327-14.432],P<0.001), pneumonia (OR 7.373 [95%CI 4.823-11.271],P<0.001), ARDS (OR 48.058 [95%CI 11.689-197.588],P<0.001) and multisystem inflammatory syndrome caused by COVID-19 (OR 9.573 [95%CI 3.036-30.191],P<0.001), heart failure (OR 64.509 [95%CI 24.462-170.121],P<0.001), myocarditis (OR 4.682 [95%CI 1.278-17.149],P=0.020), acute and/or chronic kidney failure (OR 7.946 [95%CI 3.606-17.508],P<0.001), cancer (OR 5.220 [95%CI 2.599-10.485],P<0.001) and liver diseases (OR 5.501 [95%CI 2.177-13.899],P<0.001) were associated with ICU admission.
Conclusion: Proportion of hospitalized paediatric COVID-19-patients admitted on ICU in Germany was low, with 4.3% accompanied by 3.5% case-fatality rate. Independent factors for ICU admission comprised cardio-vascular risk factors, comorbidities, and complications of COVID-19.
Keywords: COVID-19; human resources; intensive care unit; mortality; ventilation.
Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Ltd.