Author: Welder, Daniel; Jeonâ€Slaughter, Haekyung; Ashraf, Bilal; Choi, Sungâ€Hee; Chen, Weina; Ibrahim, Ibrahim; Bat, Taha
Title: Immature platelets as a biomarker for disease severity and mortality in COVIDâ€19 patients Cord-id: 3ladtozt Document date: 2021_7_11
ID: 3ladtozt
Snippet: COVIDâ€19, caused by SARSâ€CoVâ€2, is a contagious lifeâ€threatening viral disease that has killed more than three million people worldwide to date. Attempts have been made to identify biomarker(s) to stratify disease severity and improve treatment and resource allocation. Patients with SARSâ€COVâ€2 infection manifest with a higher inflammatory response and platelet hyperreactivity; this raises the question of the role of thrombopoiesis in COVIDâ€19 infection. Immature platelet fraction (
Document: COVIDâ€19, caused by SARSâ€CoVâ€2, is a contagious lifeâ€threatening viral disease that has killed more than three million people worldwide to date. Attempts have been made to identify biomarker(s) to stratify disease severity and improve treatment and resource allocation. Patients with SARSâ€COVâ€2 infection manifest with a higher inflammatory response and platelet hyperreactivity; this raises the question of the role of thrombopoiesis in COVIDâ€19 infection. Immature platelet fraction (IPF, %) and immature platelet counts (IPC, ×10(9)/l) can be used to assess thrombopoiesis. This study investigates whether the level of thrombopoiesis correlates with COVIDâ€19 severity. A large cohort of 678 wellâ€characterized COVIDâ€19 patients was analyzed, including 658 (97%) hospitalized and 139 (21%) admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). Elevated percentage IPF at presentation was predictive of length of hospitalization (P < 0·01) and ICU admission (P < 0·05). Additionally, percentage IPF at the peak was significantly higher among ICU patients than nonâ€ICU patients (6·9 ± 5·1 vs 5·3 ± 8·4, P < 0·01) and among deceased patients than recovered patients (7·9 ± 6·3 vs 5·4 ± 7·8, P < 0·01). Furthermore, IPC at the peak was significantly higher among ICU patients than nonâ€ICU patients (18·5 ± 16·2 vs. 13·2 ± 8·3, P < 0·05) and among patients on a ventilator than those not (22·1 ± 20·1 vs.13·4 ± 8·4, P < 0·05). Our study demonstrated that elevated initial and peak values of percentage IPF and IPC might serve as prognostic biomarkers for COVIDâ€19 progression to severe conditions.
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