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Clinical features and virological analysis of a case of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection

BACKGROUND: The Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is an emerging virus involved in cases and case clusters of severe acute respiratory infection in the Arabian Peninsula, Tunisia, Morocco, France, Italy, Germany, and the UK. We provide a full description of a fatal case of MERS...

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Autores principales: Drosten, Christian, Seilmaier, Michael, Corman, Victor M, Hartmann, Wulf, Scheible, Gregor, Sack, Stefan, Guggemos, Wolfgang, Kallies, Rene, Muth, Doreen, Junglen, Sandra, Müller, Marcel A, Haas, Walter, Guberina, Hana, Röhnisch, Tim, Schmid-Wendtner, Monika, Aldabbagh, Souhaib, Dittmer, Ulf, Gold, Hermann, Graf, Petra, Bonin, Frank, Rambaut, Andrew, Wendtner, Clemens-Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Ltd. 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7164791/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23782859
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(13)70154-3
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author Drosten, Christian
Seilmaier, Michael
Corman, Victor M
Hartmann, Wulf
Scheible, Gregor
Sack, Stefan
Guggemos, Wolfgang
Kallies, Rene
Muth, Doreen
Junglen, Sandra
Müller, Marcel A
Haas, Walter
Guberina, Hana
Röhnisch, Tim
Schmid-Wendtner, Monika
Aldabbagh, Souhaib
Dittmer, Ulf
Gold, Hermann
Graf, Petra
Bonin, Frank
Rambaut, Andrew
Wendtner, Clemens-Martin
author_facet Drosten, Christian
Seilmaier, Michael
Corman, Victor M
Hartmann, Wulf
Scheible, Gregor
Sack, Stefan
Guggemos, Wolfgang
Kallies, Rene
Muth, Doreen
Junglen, Sandra
Müller, Marcel A
Haas, Walter
Guberina, Hana
Röhnisch, Tim
Schmid-Wendtner, Monika
Aldabbagh, Souhaib
Dittmer, Ulf
Gold, Hermann
Graf, Petra
Bonin, Frank
Rambaut, Andrew
Wendtner, Clemens-Martin
author_sort Drosten, Christian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is an emerging virus involved in cases and case clusters of severe acute respiratory infection in the Arabian Peninsula, Tunisia, Morocco, France, Italy, Germany, and the UK. We provide a full description of a fatal case of MERS-CoV infection and associated phylogenetic analyses. METHODS: We report data for a patient who was admitted to the Klinikum Schwabing (Munich, Germany) for severe acute respiratory infection. We did diagnostic RT-PCR and indirect immunofluorescence. From time of diagnosis, respiratory, faecal, and urine samples were obtained for virus quantification. We constructed a maximum likelihood tree of the five available complete MERS-CoV genomes. FINDINGS: A 73-year-old man from Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, was transferred to Klinikum Schwabing on March 19, 2013, on day 11 of illness. He had been diagnosed with multiple myeloma in 2008, and had received several lines of treatment. The patient died on day 18, due to septic shock. MERS-CoV was detected in two samples of bronchoalveolar fluid. Viral loads were highest in samples from the lower respiratory tract (up to 1·2 × 10(6) copies per mL). Maximum virus concentration in urine samples was 2691 RNA copies per mL on day 13; the virus was not present in the urine after renal failure on day 14. Stool samples obtained on days 12 and 16 contained the virus, with up to 1031 RNA copies per g (close to the lowest detection limit of the assay). One of two oronasal swabs obtained on day 16 were positive, but yielded little viral RNA (5370 copies per mL). No virus was detected in blood. The full virus genome was combined with four other available full genome sequences in a maximum likelihood phylogeny, correlating branch lengths with dates of isolation. The time of the common ancestor was halfway through 2011. Addition of novel genome data from an unlinked case treated 6 months previously in Essen, Germany, showed a clustering of viruses derived from Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. INTERPRETATION: We have provided the first complete viral load profile in a case of MERS-CoV infection. MERS-CoV might have shedding patterns that are different from those of severe acute respiratory syndrome and so might need alternative diagnostic approaches. FUNDING: European Union; German Centre for Infection Research; German Research Council; and German Ministry for Education and Research.
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spelling pubmed-71647912020-04-20 Clinical features and virological analysis of a case of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection Drosten, Christian Seilmaier, Michael Corman, Victor M Hartmann, Wulf Scheible, Gregor Sack, Stefan Guggemos, Wolfgang Kallies, Rene Muth, Doreen Junglen, Sandra Müller, Marcel A Haas, Walter Guberina, Hana Röhnisch, Tim Schmid-Wendtner, Monika Aldabbagh, Souhaib Dittmer, Ulf Gold, Hermann Graf, Petra Bonin, Frank Rambaut, Andrew Wendtner, Clemens-Martin Lancet Infect Dis Article BACKGROUND: The Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is an emerging virus involved in cases and case clusters of severe acute respiratory infection in the Arabian Peninsula, Tunisia, Morocco, France, Italy, Germany, and the UK. We provide a full description of a fatal case of MERS-CoV infection and associated phylogenetic analyses. METHODS: We report data for a patient who was admitted to the Klinikum Schwabing (Munich, Germany) for severe acute respiratory infection. We did diagnostic RT-PCR and indirect immunofluorescence. From time of diagnosis, respiratory, faecal, and urine samples were obtained for virus quantification. We constructed a maximum likelihood tree of the five available complete MERS-CoV genomes. FINDINGS: A 73-year-old man from Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, was transferred to Klinikum Schwabing on March 19, 2013, on day 11 of illness. He had been diagnosed with multiple myeloma in 2008, and had received several lines of treatment. The patient died on day 18, due to septic shock. MERS-CoV was detected in two samples of bronchoalveolar fluid. Viral loads were highest in samples from the lower respiratory tract (up to 1·2 × 10(6) copies per mL). Maximum virus concentration in urine samples was 2691 RNA copies per mL on day 13; the virus was not present in the urine after renal failure on day 14. Stool samples obtained on days 12 and 16 contained the virus, with up to 1031 RNA copies per g (close to the lowest detection limit of the assay). One of two oronasal swabs obtained on day 16 were positive, but yielded little viral RNA (5370 copies per mL). No virus was detected in blood. The full virus genome was combined with four other available full genome sequences in a maximum likelihood phylogeny, correlating branch lengths with dates of isolation. The time of the common ancestor was halfway through 2011. Addition of novel genome data from an unlinked case treated 6 months previously in Essen, Germany, showed a clustering of viruses derived from Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. INTERPRETATION: We have provided the first complete viral load profile in a case of MERS-CoV infection. MERS-CoV might have shedding patterns that are different from those of severe acute respiratory syndrome and so might need alternative diagnostic approaches. FUNDING: European Union; German Centre for Infection Research; German Research Council; and German Ministry for Education and Research. Elsevier Ltd. 2013-09 2013-06-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7164791/ /pubmed/23782859 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(13)70154-3 Text en Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active.
spellingShingle Article
Drosten, Christian
Seilmaier, Michael
Corman, Victor M
Hartmann, Wulf
Scheible, Gregor
Sack, Stefan
Guggemos, Wolfgang
Kallies, Rene
Muth, Doreen
Junglen, Sandra
Müller, Marcel A
Haas, Walter
Guberina, Hana
Röhnisch, Tim
Schmid-Wendtner, Monika
Aldabbagh, Souhaib
Dittmer, Ulf
Gold, Hermann
Graf, Petra
Bonin, Frank
Rambaut, Andrew
Wendtner, Clemens-Martin
Clinical features and virological analysis of a case of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title Clinical features and virological analysis of a case of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title_full Clinical features and virological analysis of a case of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title_fullStr Clinical features and virological analysis of a case of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title_full_unstemmed Clinical features and virological analysis of a case of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title_short Clinical features and virological analysis of a case of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title_sort clinical features and virological analysis of a case of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7164791/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23782859
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(13)70154-3
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