Blood of COVID Patients Could Predict Severity of Illness and Help Develop Targeted Treatments
By HospiMedica International staff writers
Posted on 21 Dec 2020
An international team of researchers has found key biomarkers in the plasma of COVID-19 patients, which will help predict the severity of illness and could lead to new treatments for the virus.Posted on 21 Dec 2020
The study led by immunologists from the Dalhousie University (Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada) and critical care specialists in Spain involved patients with COVID-19 whose plasma was tested in Spain for the presence of ribonucleic acid or RNA, the virus’s genetic blueprint. The researchers assessed the viral loads in the plasma of three groups of patients with varying degrees of illness during the first wave of the pandemic wave in Spain from March 16 to April 15, 2020. The team found that 78% of patients who were severely ill had higher amounts of viral RNA than those with mild cases. Those who died had the highest concentrations of viral RNA in their plasma, leading the researchers to conclude that the presence of the RNA in a patient’s blood is linked to critical illness.
The team believes that the research could help in quickly identifying patients at crowded hospital emergency rooms who need immediate and intensive care, and those who may be able to go home. The researchers are now working with a large pharmaceutical company to develop a rapid test that could produce results in 15 minutes and indicate whether a positive patient has the viral RNA and what level of care they may need. Such a device could be a valuable asset as confirmed case counts and hospitalizations continue to surge, particularly in the US.
Importantly as well, the team also discovered that the presence of COVID-19 viral RNA was directly linked to a dysfunctional immune response. That may make severe patients unable to fend off the COVID-19 infection, due in part to elevated levels of certain proteins. The identification of these patients will also help identify those who could be treated with new therapeutics, such as antibody cocktails. The team used a method called droplet digital PCR to quantify the virus’s genomic material in plasma in the 50 outpatients, 100 hospitalized ward patients and 100 who were critically ill in what is believed to be the largest study of its kind using such methodology.
“We now have an extremely reliable indicator for identifying severe COVID-19 patients who require critical care and should be admitted to the ICU, which will help intensive care unit doctors prioritize severely ill patients,” said Dr. David Kelvin, a professor and Canada Research Chair at the Dalhousie’s Department of Microbiology and Immunology. “The importance of this study is that it allows identification of those patients most in need of ICU admission - all of it done by a simple blood test for presence of viral RNA.”
“We are also trying to figure out the why viral components are in the blood and how this leads to immune dysfunction and severe disease. Several clues are now before us and we hope to develop novel therapeutics to aid in treating severe patients,” added Dr. Kelvin.
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Dalhousie University