Author: Cooper, Jennifer; Stukas, Sophie K; Hoiland, Ryan; Thiara, Sonny; Foster, Denise; Mitra, Anish; Panenka, William J; Sekhon, Mypinder S; Wellington, Cheryl L
Title: Quantification of neurological bloodâ€based biomarkers in critically ill patients with COVIDâ€19: Developing topics Cord-id: h5v9icxc Document date: 2020_12_7
ID: h5v9icxc
Snippet: BACKGROUND: Multiple neurological manifestations of COVIDâ€19 have been reported such as headache, anosmia, ischemic stroke, and cerebral hemorrhages. Objective characterization of the acute neurological damage in critically ill patients with COVIDâ€19 has not yet been reported. METHOD: We performed a prospective observational study of plasma brain biomarkers in critically ill patients with respiratory failure that were diagnosed with (COVIDâ€19) or without (ICU control) COVIDâ€19. Demograph
Document: BACKGROUND: Multiple neurological manifestations of COVIDâ€19 have been reported such as headache, anosmia, ischemic stroke, and cerebral hemorrhages. Objective characterization of the acute neurological damage in critically ill patients with COVIDâ€19 has not yet been reported. METHOD: We performed a prospective observational study of plasma brain biomarkers in critically ill patients with respiratory failure that were diagnosed with (COVIDâ€19) or without (ICU control) COVIDâ€19. Demographics, coâ€morbidities, daily clinical physiologic and laboratory data were collected. Plasma samples were drawn for measurement of neurofilamentâ€light chain (NFâ€L), total tau (tâ€tau), ubiquitin carboxyâ€terminal hydrolase L1 (UCHâ€L1), and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). The primary neurological outcome was delirium as defined by the intensive care delirium screening checklist (ICDSC, scale 1 †8). Associations between brain biomarkers and markers of respiratory failure of COVIDâ€19 were analyzed. RESULT: 27 patients with COVIDâ€19 and 19 ICU controls were enrolled. The concentration of plasma GFAP, UCHâ€L1 and NFâ€L levels was higher in both groups compared to healthy controls. Compared to ICU controls, patients with COVIDâ€19 had significantly higher GFAP (272 [150â€555] pg/ml vs 118 [78.5â€168] pg/ml, p=0.0009). In patients with COVIDâ€19, GFAP (rho=0.5115, p=0.0064), UCHâ€L1 (rho=0.4056, p=0.0358) and NFâ€L (rho=0.6223, p=0.0005) were positively correlated with the ICDSC score and were higher in patients diagnosed with delirium (ICDSC ≥4) in the COVIDâ€19 group but not ICU controls. There were no associations between PaO2/FiO2 or diagnosis of ARDS and plasma concentration of GFAP, tâ€tau, UCHâ€L1, or NFâ€L in patients with COVIDâ€19. CONCLUSION: Plasma GFAP is 2â€fold higher in critically ill patients with COVIDâ€19 compared to ICU controls, and higher concentrations of GFAP, UCHâ€L1 and NFâ€L are associated with delirium specifically in patients with COVIDâ€19.
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