Cape Breton Post

Younger people getting sicker, faster with COVID, say doctors

- SHARON KIRKEY

TORONTO - Younger people are getting more severely ill with COVID, and more quickly, prompting desperate “rescue” interventi­ons for people as young as 22 at one Toronto Hospital.

On Monday, 17 people with COVID-19 were connected to extracorpo­real membrane oxygenatio­n, or ECMO, at Toronto General Hospital, the highest number since the pandemic began. Their ages ranged from 22 to 61. Four are in their 20s or 30s.

“Certainly, we've seen a shift in the kinds of patients that we're seeing coming to the ICU in this wave,” said Dr. Eddy Fan, medical director of the Extracorpo­real Life Support Program at Toronto's University Health Network, or UHN. His ECMO unit, the largest in Canada, is also a provincial referral centre

In wave one and two, most of those put on ECMO because of COVID-ravaged lungs were older, in their 50s and 60s, with chronic health problems. Now, they're younger, many previously healthy.

What's also different is how swiftly some people are progressin­g from sick, to mortally ill.

In earlier waves, ICU doctors saw a typical pattern among patients, said Dr. Niall Ferguson, head of critical care medicine at the UHN. “They were sick at home for a week, sick at another hospital for a week, then intubated and on a ventilator for a week, and then they got bad enough to need to come to us.”

People are now getting to that state in a matter of days, not weeks. “That's been a very clear shift,” Fan said.

A new briefing paper released Monday evening by Ontario's science advisors shows that the percentage of COVID-19 patients in the province's intensive care units younger than 60 is about 50 percent higher now than it was prior to the start of the last province-wide lockdown at the end of December — a trend driven by fast spreading “variants of concern.”

On social media, doctors are describing previously healthy people “in the prime of their lives” on life-support with COVID. “This wave is worse than a year ago. Worse than January. They're younger. They're sicker,” Dr. Shankar Sivanantha­n, a critical care doctor with the William Osler Health System, a hospital serving Brampton and North Etobicoke tweeted last week.

According to Ontario's COVID-19 science advisory table, the new variants now account for 67 percent of all Ontario SARS-CoV-2 infections. Compared with earlier variants, the new mutations roughly double the relative risk of ICU admission and increase the risk of dying from COVID-19 by 56 per cent.

The variants have picked up a mutation that makes it easier for the virus to latch onto receptors on human respirator­y cells. “Clearly there is something that is making them both more transmissi­ble and able to replicate more quickly,” Ferguson said.

Young adults are much less likely than older people to become seriously sick with COVID. But their risk of needing ICU care or dying is not inconseque­ntial, said Dr. Scott Solomon, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and senior physician in the cardiovasc­ular division at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

Solomon is a co-author of a recent analysis reported in JAMA Internal Medicine. He and his colleagues analyzed the medical records of 3,222 people, aged 18 to 34, admitted to American hospitals with COVID in the spring wave of 2020.

In all, 21 per cent required intensive care, 10 per cent mechanical ventilatio­n and three per cent died. The death rate was lower than that reported for older adults with COVID, but roughly double that of young adults with a sudden heart attack. Severe obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes increased the likelihood of severe “outcomes” from COVID in the young. So did being male.

“The demographi­cs of COVID-19 infection are clearly changing from the spring (of 2020),” Solomon said. In Canada, new infections are highest among the 20- to 29-year-olds, a more mobile and socially active group, but whether the new variants alone are contributi­ng to more younger people being hospitaliz­ed “is hard to know for sure,” Solomon said.

 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? People sit at a restaurant patio to take advantage of sunny weather in Ottawa.
POSTMEDIA NEWS People sit at a restaurant patio to take advantage of sunny weather in Ottawa.

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