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Viral RNA load in plasma is associated with critical illness and a dysregulated host response in COVID-19.

Authors :
Bermejo-Martin JF
González-Rivera M
Almansa R
Micheloud D
Tedim AP
Domínguez-Gil M
Resino S
Martín-Fernández M
Ryan Murua P
Pérez-García F
Tamayo L
Lopez-Izquierdo R
Bustamante E
Aldecoa C
Gómez JM
Rico-Feijoo J
Orduña A
Méndez R
Fernández Natal I
Megías G
González-Estecha M
Carriedo D
Doncel C
Jorge N
Ortega A
de la Fuente A
Del Campo F
Fernández-Ratero JA
Trapiello W
González-Jiménez P
Ruiz G
Kelvin AA
Ostadgavahi AT
Oneizat R
Ruiz LM
Miguéns I
Gargallo E
Muñoz I
Pelegrin S
Martín S
García Olivares P
Cedeño JA
Ruiz Albi T
Puertas C
Berezo JÁ
Renedo G
Herrán R
Bustamante-Munguira J
Enríquez P
Cicuendez R
Blanco J
Abadia J
Gómez Barquero J
Mamolar N
Blanca-López N
Valdivia LJ
Fernández Caso B
Mantecón MÁ
Motos A
Fernandez-Barat L
Ferrer R
Barbé F
Torres A
Menéndez R
Eiros JM
Kelvin DJ
Source :
Critical care (London, England) [Crit Care] 2020 Dec 14; Vol. 24 (1), pp. 691. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Dec 14.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: COVID-19 can course with respiratory and extrapulmonary disease. SARS-CoV-2 RNA is detected in respiratory samples but also in blood, stool and urine. Severe COVID-19 is characterized by a dysregulated host response to this virus. We studied whether viral RNAemia or viral RNA load in plasma is associated with severe COVID-19 and also to this dysregulated response.<br />Methods: A total of 250 patients with COVID-19 were recruited (50 outpatients, 100 hospitalized ward patients and 100 critically ill). Viral RNA detection and quantification in plasma was performed using droplet digital PCR, targeting the N1 and N2 regions of the SARS-CoV-2 nucleoprotein gene. The association between SARS-CoV-2 RNAemia and viral RNA load in plasma with severity was evaluated by multivariate logistic regression. Correlations between viral RNA load and biomarkers evidencing dysregulation of host response were evaluated by calculating the Spearman correlation coefficients.<br />Results: The frequency of viral RNAemia was higher in the critically ill patients (78%) compared to ward patients (27%) and outpatients (2%) (p < 0.001). Critical patients had higher viral RNA loads in plasma than non-critically ill patients, with non-survivors showing the highest values. When outpatients and ward patients were compared, viral RNAemia did not show significant associations in the multivariate analysis. In contrast, when ward patients were compared with ICU patients, both viral RNAemia and viral RNA load in plasma were associated with critical illness (OR [CI 95%], p): RNAemia (3.92 [1.183-12.968], 0.025), viral RNA load (N1) (1.962 [1.244-3.096], 0.004); viral RNA load (N2) (2.229 [1.382-3.595], 0.001). Viral RNA load in plasma correlated with higher levels of chemokines (CXCL10, CCL2), biomarkers indicative of a systemic inflammatory response (IL-6, CRP, ferritin), activation of NK cells (IL-15), endothelial dysfunction (VCAM-1, angiopoietin-2, ICAM-1), coagulation activation (D-Dimer and INR), tissue damage (LDH, GPT), neutrophil response (neutrophils counts, myeloperoxidase, GM-CSF) and immunodepression (PD-L1, IL-10, lymphopenia and monocytopenia).<br />Conclusions: SARS-CoV-2 RNAemia and viral RNA load in plasma are associated with critical illness in COVID-19. Viral RNA load in plasma correlates with key signatures of dysregulated host responses, suggesting a major role of uncontrolled viral replication in the pathogenesis of this disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1466-609X
Volume :
24
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Critical care (London, England)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33317616
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-020-03398-0