1. Prepandemic Metabolic Correlates of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Severity and Long COVID Incidence in People Living With HIV.
- Author
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Agrawal, Priyesh, Giron, Leila B, Singh, Shalini, Haw, Nel Jason, Goldman, Aaron R, Elkaeid, Mohamed, Macatangay, Bernard, Palella, Frank J, Alcaide, Maria L, Moran, Caitlin A, Kassaye, Seble G, Erdmann, Nathan, Chew, Kara W, Floris-Moore, Michelle, Chandran, Aruna, Augenbraun, Michael H, Sharma, Anjali, Palmer, Clovis, Landay, Alan L, and Peluso, Michael J
- Subjects
POST-acute COVID-19 syndrome ,COVID-19 ,HIV ,HIV-positive persons ,TRYPTOPHAN - Abstract
Host metabolic dysregulation, especially in tryptophan metabolism, is intricately linked to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) severity and its postacute sequelae (long COVID). People living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV; PLWH) experience similar metabolic dysregulation and face an increased risk of developing long COVID. However, whether preexisting HIV-associated metabolic dysregulations contribute in predisposing PLWH to severe COVID-19 outcomes remains underexplored. Analyzing prepandemic samples from PLWH with documented postinfection outcomes, we found specific metabolic alterations, including increased tryptophan catabolism, predicting an elevated risk of severe COVID-19 and the incidence of long COVID. These alterations warrant further investigation for their potential prognostic and mechanistic significance in determining COVID-19 complications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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