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Flower lose, a cell fitness marker, predicts COVID‐19 prognosis

Authors :
Michail Yekelchyk
Esha Madan
Jochen Wilhelm
Kirsty R Short
António M Palma
Linbu Liao
Denise Camacho
Everlyne Nkadori
Michael T Winters
Emily S Rice
Inês Rolim
Raquel Cruz‐Duarte
Christopher J Pelham
Masaki Nagane
Kartik Gupta
Sahil Chaudhary
Thomas Braun
Raghavendra Pillappa
Mark S Parker
Thomas Menter
Matthias Matter
Jasmin Dionne Haslbauer
Markus Tolnay
Kornelia D Galior
Kristina A Matkwoskyj
Stephanie M McGregor
Laura K Muller
Emad A Rakha
Antonio Lopez‐Beltran
Ronny Drapkin
Maximilian Ackermann
Paul B Fisher
Steven R Grossman
Andrew K Godwin
Arutha Kulasinghe
Ivan Martinez
Clay B Marsh
Benjamin Tang
Max S Wicha
Kyoung Jae Won
Alexandar Tzankov
Eduardo Moreno
Rajan Gogna
Source :
EMBO Molecular Medicine, Vol 13, Iss 11, Pp n/a-n/a (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract Risk stratification of COVID‐19 patients is essential for pandemic management. Changes in the cell fitness marker, hFwe‐Lose, can precede the host immune response to infection, potentially making such a biomarker an earlier triage tool. Here, we evaluate whether hFwe‐Lose gene expression can outperform conventional methods in predicting outcomes (e.g., death and hospitalization) in COVID‐19 patients. We performed a post‐mortem examination of infected lung tissue in deceased COVID‐19 patients to determine hFwe‐Lose’s biological role in acute lung injury. We then performed an observational study (n = 283) to evaluate whether hFwe‐Lose expression (in nasopharyngeal samples) could accurately predict hospitalization or death in COVID‐19 patients. In COVID‐19 patients with acute lung injury, hFwe‐Lose is highly expressed in the lower respiratory tract and is co‐localized to areas of cell death. In patients presenting in the early phase of COVID‐19 illness, hFwe‐Lose expression accurately predicts subsequent hospitalization or death with positive predictive values of 87.8–100% and a negative predictive value of 64.1–93.2%. hFwe‐Lose outperforms conventional inflammatory biomarkers and patient age and comorbidities, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) 0.93–0.97 in predicting hospitalization/death. Specifically, this is significantly higher than the prognostic value of combining biomarkers (serum ferritin, D‐dimer, C‐reactive protein, and neutrophil–lymphocyte ratio), patient age and comorbidities (AUROC of 0.67–0.92). The cell fitness marker, hFwe‐Lose, accurately predicts outcomes in COVID‐19 patients. This finding demonstrates how tissue fitness pathways dictate the response to infection and disease and their utility in managing the current COVID‐19 pandemic.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17574684 and 17574676
Volume :
13
Issue :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
EMBO Molecular Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f8eb078fb27a469bb4350f69d131fd6a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.202013714