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White blood cells scattergram as a valuable tool for COVID-19 screening: A multicentric study.

Authors :
Osman J
Gonnin C
Lambert J
Behier C
Chapuis N
Chevalier S
Debus J
Delaval A
Depoorter M
Dumas C
Dumesges A
Dussert P
Vacher CF
Dubois-Galopin F
Gerard D
Bollotte PG
Guignedoux G
Mayeur-Rousse C
Mercier-Bataille D
Ronez E
Trichet C
Wiber M
Raggueneau V
Source :
International journal of laboratory hematology [Int J Lab Hematol] 2024 Aug; Vol. 46 (4), pp. 613-619. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Mar 04.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Introduction: New tools have been developed to distinguish the COVID-19 diagnosis from other viral infections presenting similar symptomatology and mitigate the lack of sensitivity of molecular testing. We previously identified a specific "sandglass" aspect on the white blood cells (WBC) scattergram of COVID-19 patients, as a highly reliable COVID-19 screening test (sensitivity: 85.9%, specificity: 83.5% and positive predictive value: 94.3%). We then decided to validate our previous data in a multicentric study.<br />Methods: This retrospective study involved 817 patients with flu-like illness, among 20 centers, using the same CBC instrument (XN analyzer, SYSMEX, Japan). After training, one specialist per center independently evaluated, under the same conditions, the presence of the "sandglass" aspect of the WDF scattergram, likely representing plasmacytoid lymphocytes.<br />Results: Overall, this approach showed sensitivity: 59.0%, specificity: 72.9% and positive predictive value: 77.7%. Sensitivity improved with subgroup analysis, including in patients with lymphopenia (65.2%), patients presenting symptoms for more than 5 days (72.3%) and in patients with ARDS (70.1%). COVID-19 patients with larger plasmacytoid lymphocyte cluster (>15 cells) more often have severe outcomes (70% vs. 15% in the control group).<br />Conclusion: Our findings confirm that the WBC scattergram analysis could be added to a diagnostic algorithm for screening and quickly categorizing symptomatic patients as either COVID-19 probable or improbable, especially during COVID-19 resurgence and overlapping with future influenza epidemics. The observed large size of the plasmacytoid lymphocytes cluster appears to be a hallmark of COVID-19 patients and was indicative of a severe outcome. Furthers studies are ongoing to evaluate the value of the new hematological parameters in combination with WDF analysis.<br /> (© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1751-553X
Volume :
46
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International journal of laboratory hematology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38439664
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/ijlh.14257