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. 2022 May 1;9(7):ofac223. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofac223

Table 3.

Association Between Baseline Characteristics and In-Hospital Mortality Within a Subset of Admitted Patients (n = 243)

Baseline Characteristics Total Population (n = 243) Died (n = 17) Alive (n = 226) Univariable OR
(95% CI)
P Value Multivariable OR
(95% CI)
P Value
Age, median (IQR) 65.0 (20.0) 79.0 (9.0) 63.0 (20.0) 1.12 (1.07–1.20) <.001 1.21 (1.10–1.37) <.001
Male sex 149 (61.3) 12 (70.6) 137 (60.6) 1.56 (.56–5.04) .419 1.69 (.39–9.08) .502
Cp value, median (IQR) 24.9 (5.2) 22.7 (3.4) 25.0 (5.2) 0.81 (.68–.94) .010 0.81 (.63–.99) .062
ICU admission 47 (19.3) 9 (52.9) 38 (16.8) 5.57 (2.01–15.73) <.001 25.51 (5.22–184.76) <.001
BMI, kg/m2, median (IQR) 27.0 (6.6) 29.4 (3.6) 26.6 (6.7) 1.04 (.94–1.14) .381 1.07 (.92–1.23) .345

Data are presented as No. (%) unless otherwise indicated. ORs and related P values indicate the associations between baseline characteristics and in-hospital mortality.

Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; CI, confidence interval; Cp, crossing point; ICU, intensive care unit; IQR, interquartile range; OR, odds ratio.