Tuesday, 23 April, 2024
HomeCoronavirus WatchBlood biomarkers offer early indicator of severe COVID-19 — Yale

Blood biomarkers offer early indicator of severe COVID-19 — Yale

When patients with COVID-19 arrive in emergency rooms, there are relatively few ways for doctors to predict which ones are more likely to become critically ill and require intensive care and which ones are more likely to enjoy a quick recovery. New Yale University research could help them identify important early clues. In a recent study, researchers report that a series of biomarkers, or biological signals, associated with white blood cell activation and obesity can predict severe outcomes in COVID-19 patients.

“Patients with high levels of these markers were much more like to require care in the intensive care unit, require ventilation, or die due to their COVID-19,” said Dr Hyung Chun, the lead author, an associate professor of medicine in cardiovascular medicine and pathology and director of translational research at the Yale Pulmonary Vascular Disease Programme.

Previously, a few laboratory studies had identified possible indicators of severe COVID-19, including D-dimer levels, a measure of blood coagulation, and levels of proteins known as cytokines, which are released as part of inflammatory responses in the body. However, until now, no laboratory marker could predict which patients with COVID-19 would eventually become critically ill prior to showing clinical signs and symptoms of severe disease.

For this study, Yale researchers used proteomic profiling – a screen for multiple proteins within the blood – to analyse samples taken from 100 patients who would go on to experience different levels of COVID-19 severity. In all cases, the blood samples were collected on the patients’ first day of admission. The researchers also analysed clinical data for over 3,000 additional patients with COVID-19 within the Yale New Haven Hospital system.

They found that five proteins (resistin, lipocalin-2, HGF, IL-8, and G-CSF) that are associated with neutrophils, a type of white blood cell, were elevated in the COVID-19 patients who later became critically ill. Many of these proteins had previously been associated with obesity but not with COVID-19 or other viral illnesses.

Notably, the elevated neutrophil biomarkers for patients who would go on to experience more serious symptoms were evident before those symptoms appeared. All COVID-19 patients who were admitted or transferred to the ICU had elevated neutrophil activation markers, while these biomarkers remained low for patients who never developed severe illness. None of the patients with lower neutrophil biomarker levels died.

“This is one of the first demonstrations that a set of biomarkers in the blood of COVID patients can predict eventual ICU admission, even before such patients become critically ill,” said study author Dr Alfred Lee, associate professor of medicine in haematology, director of the Yale Medical Oncology-Haematology Fellowship Programme, and a member of the Yale Cancer Centre.

Having early knowledge of these indicators could significantly improve patient treatment, the researchers said.

“If a diagnostic test (for these biomarkers) could be ordered early, it could give us a better sense of who is more likely to become critically ill and will benefit from a higher level of care and consideration for therapies that affect the immune system early on in their hospitalisation,” said Chun. “Many of these drugs do carry potential side effects, and these tests may help identify those patients who would benefit the most.”

The study also underscores the connection between COVID-19 and obesity, researchers said. The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention notes that obesity and severe obesity increase risk of severe illness from COVID-19. Obesity triples the risk of hospitalisation from COVID-19, and levels of body mass index has been found to correlate with the risk of death from COVID-19.

Neutrophils are inflammatory cells, said Lee, so it makes sense that they would be elevated in the context of both obesity – which involves chronic, low-grade inflammation – and COVID-19, which causes hyperinflammation in the most severe cases, leading to tissue damage and organ failure.

“There are also signs that neutrophils might participate in thrombosis or blood clotting,” said Lee, another troubling hallmark of COVID-19.

The researchers will expand their study into the relationship between biomarkers and COVID-19 by looking at patients who have recovered from acute illness.
“We are hoping these findings motivate other groups to look at their own patient populations,” said Chun, adding that they’ll need additional validation studies that would support developing diagnostic tests for these biomarkers.

The research involved collaborators from across many different Yale departments, including Dr Matthew L Meizlish, an MD-PhD student; Dr Alex Pine, an assistant professor of medicine in haematology and staff physician at the VA Medical Centre in West Haven; Jason Bishai, a graduate student; Hanming Zhang and C-Hong Chang, postdoctoral fellows; and David van Dijk, an assistant professor of medicine in cardiology.

“The evolution of our findings really shows the power of collaboration, which has emerged as one hopeful aspect of this devastating pandemic that we will continue to harness for the benefit of the patients,” said Lee.

 

Study details
A neutrophil activation signature predicts critical illness and mortality in COVID-19

Matthew L Meizlish, Alexander B Pine, Jason D. Bishai, George Goshua, Emily R Nadelmann, Michael Simonov, C-Hong Chang, Hanming Zhang, Marcus Shallow, Parveen Bahel, Kent Owusu, Yu Yamamoto, Tanima Arora, Deepak S Atri, Amisha Patel, Rana Gbyli, Jennifer Kwan, Christine H Won, Charles Dela Cruz, Christina Price, Jonathan Koff, Brett A King, Henry M. Rinder, F Perry Wilson, John Hwa, Stephanie Halene, William Damsky, David van Dijk, Alfred I Lee, Hyung J Chun

Published in Blood Advances on 26 February 2021

Abstract
Pathologic immune hyperactivation is emerging as a key feature of critical illness in COVID-19, but the mechanisms involved remain poorly understood. We carried out proteomic profiling of plasma from cross-sectional and longitudinal cohorts of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 and analyzed clinical data from our health system database of more than 3300 patients. Using a machine learning algorithm, we identified a prominent signature of neutrophil activation, including resistin, lipocalin-2, hepatocyte growth factor, interleukin-8, and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, which were the strongest predictors of critical illness. Evidence of neutrophil activation was present on the first day of hospitalization in patients who would only later require transfer to the intensive care unit, thus preceding the onset of critical illness and predicting increased mortality. In the health system database, early elevations in developing and mature neutrophil counts also predicted higher mortality rates. Altogether, these data suggest a central role for neutrophil activation in the pathogenesis of severe COVID-19 and identify molecular markers that distinguish patients at risk of future clinical decompensation.

 

[link url="https://news.yale.edu/2021/02/26/blood-tests-offer-early-indicator-severe-covid-19-study-says#:~:text=In%20a%20recent%20study%2C%20researchers,26%20edition%20of%20Blood%20Advances."]Yale University material[/link]

 

[link url="https://ashpublications.org/bloodadvances/article/5/5/1164/475293/A-neutrophil-activation-signature-predicts?searchresult=1"]Blood Advances study (Open access)[/link]

MedicalBrief — our free weekly e-newsletter

We'd appreciate as much information as possible, however only an email address is required.