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The underlying changes and predicting role of peripheral blood inflammatory cells in severe COVID-19 patients: A sentinel?

Authors :
Tao Zan
Yu shi Wang
Yang Li
Yang Zheng
Da wei Sun
Chang lei Cui
Jie Cao
Ying Tang
Dong Zhang
Nan Zhang
Dong xuan Wang
Lan Gao
Run hui Tian
Yan zhu Huang
Guo Yue Lv
Source :
Clinica Chimica Acta, Clinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Highlights • Lymphopenia and eosinopenia might be predictors of disease severity in COVID-19. • Lymphopenia and eosinopenia might be predictors of disease progression in COVID-19. • Clinical classification-severe type is the dependently risk factor for alteration of PBICs. • PBICs might be a sentinel, and it deserves attention during COVID-19 management.<br />Background The underlying changes of peripheral blood inflammatory cells (PBICs) in COVID-19 patients are little known. Moreover, the risk factors for the underlying changes of PBICs and their predicting role in severe COVID-19 patients remain uncertain. Material and Methods This retrospective study including two cohorts: the main cohort enrolling 45 patients of severe type serving as study group, and the secondary cohort enrolling 12 patients of no-severe type serving as control group. The PBICs analysis was based on blood routine and lymphocyte subsets. The inflammatory cell levels were compared among patients according to clinical classifications, disease-associated phases, as well as one-month outcomes. Results Compared with patients of non-severe type, the patients of severe type suffered from significantly decreased counts of lymphocytes, eosinophils, basophils, but increased counts of neutrophils. These PBICs alterations got improved in recovery phase, but persisted or got worse in aggravated phase. Compared with patients in discharged group, the patients in un-discharged/died group suffered from decreased counts of total T lymphocytes, CD4+T lymphocytes, CD8+T lymphocytes, as well as NK cells at 2 weeks after treatment. Clinical classification-critically severe was the independently risk factor for lymphopenia (OR=7.701, 95%CI:1.265-46.893, P=0.027), eosinopenia (OR=5.595, 95%CI:1.008-31.054, P=0.049) and worse one-month outcome (OR=8.984; 95%CI:1.021-79.061, P=0.048). Conclusion Lymphopenia and eosinopenia may serve as predictors of disease severity and disease progression in COVID-19 patients, and enhancing the cellular immunity may contribute to COVID-19 treatment. Thus, PBICs might become a sentinel of COVID-19, and it deserves attention during COVID-19 treatment.

Details

ISSN :
00098981
Volume :
508
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinica Chimica Acta
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb55fdb08f9e1c3a171cbff513139501