2025 Volume 78 Issue 2 Pages 85-90
In 2021, vaccines against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) were developed and the Omicron variant emerged. This study compared the characteristics, treatments, and mortality of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) between 2022 and 2020–2021, using administrative claims data linked including vaccine records in a Japanese city. Patients who underwent COVID-19 antigen or polymerase chain reaction tests and were diagnosed with COVID-19 were identified. Patient characteristics, treatments, and mortality were compared between 2022 and 2020–2021 among those diagnosed with COVID-19. We identified 26,262 patients with COVID-19. The mortality in 2022 was lower than that in 2020–2021 (0.6% vs. 1.7%; P < 0.01). Patients in 2022 were significantly less likely to receive oxygen therapy, high-flow nasal oxygenation, mechanical ventilation, steroids, and tocilizumab than those in 2020–2021. Among the deceased, the proportion of those aged ≥65 years was significantly higher in 2022 than in 2020–2021 (98.4% vs. 88.6%). The logistic regression analysis indicated, older age, male sex, and ≥3 comorbidities were associated with higher mortality, whereas ≥3 vaccinations were associated with lower mortality. Patients with COVID-19 in 2022 were less likely to require respiratory care or succumb to the disease. Older patients were more likely to die in 2022 than in 2020–2021.