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The landscape of circulating platelet aggregates in COVID-19

Authors :
Takuma Suzuki
Hiroshi Kanno
Yutaka Yatomi
Masako Nishikawa
Wataru Iwasaki
Jun Takiguchi
Yuqi Zhou
Nao Nitta
Kotaro Hiramatsu
Shigekazu Takizawa
Hongqian Zhang
Jeffrey Harmon
Xuwang Yin
Yunjie Deng
Abu Hasnat Mohammad Rubaiyat
Keisuke Goda
Risako Kameyama
Yuma Ibayashi
Yan Zhuang
Walker Peterson
Gustavo K. Rohde
Mohammad Shifat-E-Rabbi
Ting-Hui Xiao
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2021.

Abstract

A characteristic clinical feature of COVID-19 is the frequent occurrence of thrombotic events. Furthermore, many cases of multiorgan failure are thrombotic in nature. Since the outbreak of COVID-19, D-dimer testing has been used extensively to evaluate COVID-19-associated thrombosis, but does not provide a complete view of the disease because it probes blood coagulation, but not platelet activity. Due to this limitation, D-dimer testing fails to account for thrombotic events which occur despite low D-dimer levels, such as sudden stroke in young patients and autopsy-identified widespread microthrombi in multiple organs. Here we report the landscape of circulating platelet aggregates in COVID-19 obtained by large-scale single-cell image-based profiling and temporal monitoring of the blood of COVID-19 patients (n = 110). Surprisingly, our analysis shows the anomalous presence of excessive platelet aggregates in nearly 90% of all COVID-19 patients, including those who were not clinically diagnosed with thrombosis and those with low D-dimer levels (≤1 µg/mL). Additionally, results indicate a strong link between the concentration of platelet aggregates and the severity and mortality of COVID-19. Finally, high-dimensional analysis and comparison with other diseases reveal that COVID-19 behaves as a product of thrombosis (localized) and infectious diseases (systemic), as a cause of systemic thrombosis.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........34b5530bae3de5e114c842492e3f3d56