Author: Hempel, Louisa; Piehler, Armin; Pfaffl, Michael W.; Molnar, Jakob; Kirchner, Benedikt; Robert, Sebastian; Veloso, Julia; Gandorfer, Beate; Trepotec, Zeljka; Mederle, Stefanie; Keim, Sabine; Milani, Valeria; Ebner, Florian; Schweneker, Katrin; Fleischmann, Bastian; Kleespies, Axel; Scheiber, Josef; Hempel, Dirk; Zehn, Dietmar
Title: SARSâ€CoVâ€2 infections in cancer outpatients—Most infected patients are asymptomatic carriers without impact on chemotherapy Cord-id: ttpxyq87 Document date: 2020_10_6
ID: ttpxyq87
Snippet: Oncologic patients are regarded as the population most at risk of developing a severe course of COVIDâ€19 due to the fact that malignant diseases and chemotherapy often weaken the immune system. In the face of the ongoing SARSâ€CoVâ€2 pandemic, how particular patients deal with this infection remains an important question. In the period between the 15 and 26 April 2020, a total of 1227 patients were tested in one of seven oncologic outpatient clinics for SARSâ€CoVâ€2, regardless of symptoms
Document: Oncologic patients are regarded as the population most at risk of developing a severe course of COVIDâ€19 due to the fact that malignant diseases and chemotherapy often weaken the immune system. In the face of the ongoing SARSâ€CoVâ€2 pandemic, how particular patients deal with this infection remains an important question. In the period between the 15 and 26 April 2020, a total of 1227 patients were tested in one of seven oncologic outpatient clinics for SARSâ€CoVâ€2, regardless of symptoms, employing RTâ€qPCR. Of 1227 patients, 78 (6.4%) were tested positive of SARSâ€CoVâ€2. Only one of the patients who tested positive developed a severe form of COVIDâ€19 with pneumonia (CURBâ€65 score of 2), and two patients showed mild symptoms. Fourteen of 75 asymptomatic but positively tested patients received chemotherapy or chemoâ€immunotherapy according to their regular therapy algorithm (±4 weeks of SARSâ€CoVâ€2 test), and 48 of 78 (61.5%) positiveâ€tested patients received glucocorticoids as coâ€medication. None of the asymptomatic infected patients showed unexpected complications due to the SARSâ€CoVâ€2 infection during the cancer treatment. These data clearly contrast the view that patients with an oncologic disease are particularly vulnerable to SARSâ€CoVâ€2 and suggest that compromising therapies could be continued or started despite the ongoing pandemic. Moreover the relatively low appearance of symptoms due to COVIDâ€19 among patients on chemotherapy and other immunosuppressive coâ€medication like glucocorticoids indicate that suppressing the response capacity of the immune system reduces disease severity.
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