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Thrombotic Microangiopathy Variants Are Independently Associated with Critical Disease in COVID-19 Patients
Background: Several recent studies support the notion of excessive complement activation in patients with severe coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19), with beneficial results of complement inhibition in case series. In this context, severe COVID-19 shares common characteristics with complement-mediated...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
American Society of Hematology
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8330308/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2020-139304 |
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author | Gavriilaki, Eleni Kokoris, Styliani Touloumenidou, Tasoula Koravou, Evdoxia Koutra, Maria Karali, Vassiliki Papalexandri, Lila Chatzopoulou, Fani Chatzidimitriou, Maria Chatzidimitriou, Dimitrios Veleni, Anastasia Grigoriadis, Savvas Konstantinidou, Eulampia Chloros, Diamantis Kioumis, Ioannis Kaimakamis, Evaggelos Bitzani, Milly Boumpas, Dimitrios Tsantes, Argyrios Sotiropoulos, Damianos Sakellari, Ioanna Anagnostopoulos, Achilles |
author_facet | Gavriilaki, Eleni Kokoris, Styliani Touloumenidou, Tasoula Koravou, Evdoxia Koutra, Maria Karali, Vassiliki Papalexandri, Lila Chatzopoulou, Fani Chatzidimitriou, Maria Chatzidimitriou, Dimitrios Veleni, Anastasia Grigoriadis, Savvas Konstantinidou, Eulampia Chloros, Diamantis Kioumis, Ioannis Kaimakamis, Evaggelos Bitzani, Milly Boumpas, Dimitrios Tsantes, Argyrios Sotiropoulos, Damianos Sakellari, Ioanna Anagnostopoulos, Achilles |
author_sort | Gavriilaki, Eleni |
collection | PubMed |
description | Background: Several recent studies support the notion of excessive complement activation in patients with severe coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19), with beneficial results of complement inhibition in case series. In this context, severe COVID-19 shares common characteristics with complement-mediated thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA). TMA is commonly characterized by genetic susceptibility, and presents with thrombocytopenia, anemia, increased lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and organ damage (renal, neurological, cardiac). Aims: We hypothesized that genetic susceptibility would be also evident in patients with severe COVID-19 and would be associated with disease severity. Methods: We prospectively studied consecutive adult patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in our referral centers (April-May 2020). Diagnosis was confirmed by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). COVID-19 severity was assessed based on World Health Organization's (WHO) criteria into moderate/severe, and critical disease. Additional data on patients' history and course were recorded by treating physicians that followed patients up to discharge or death. Patients' DNA was obtained from peripheral blood samples. Probes were designed using the Design studio (Illumina). Amplicons cover exonic regions of TMA-associated genes (Complement factor H/CFH, CFH-related, CFI, CFB, CFD, C3, CD55, C5, MCP, thombomodulin/THBD, ADAMTS13) spanning 15 bases into the intronic regions. We used 10ng of initial DNA material. Libraries were quantified using Qubit and sequenced on a MiniSeq System in a 2x150 bp run. Analysis was performed using the TruSeq Amplicon application (BaseSpace). Alignment was based on the banded Smith-Waterman algorithm in the targeted regions (specified in a manifest file). We performed variant calling with the Illumina-developed Somatic Variant Caller in germline mode and variant allele frequency higher than 20%. Both Ensembl and Refseq were used for annotation of the output files. Variants clinical significance was based on ClinVar and the current version of the Complement Database, as we have previously described. Results: We studied 60 patients, 40 with moderate/severe disease hospitalized in COVID-19 general ward (GW) and 20 with critical disease hospitalized in intensive care units (ICU). Among them, 11 patients succumbed due to COVID-19 disease. Patients laboratory characteristics are shown in Figure. In genetic analysis, patients presented heterogeneous variant profiles including pathogenic, benign, likely benign, and variants of unknown significance (median number of variants: 62, range: 51-89). Search in the Complement Database revealed seven patients, each carrying one pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant in C3, CD46, DGKE, and CFH. Based on ClinVar, we found a pathogenic variant of ADAMTS13 (rs2301612, missense) in 28 patients. We also detected two missense risk factor variants, previously detected in complement-related diseases: rs2230199 in C3 (13 patients); and rs800292 in CFH (26 patients). Among them, 22 patients had a combination of these characterized variants. This combination was significantly associated with critical disease that required intensive care (p=0.037), as well as low lymphocyte counts (p=0.021) and high neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (p=0.050). In the multivariate model, critical disease was an independent predictor of double heterozygocity in these variants. Furthermore, one patient had a rare germline missense variant in CFI (rs112534524), previously detected in complement-related diseases. This patient suffered from critical disease but survived after long-term ICU hospitalization. Interestingly, five patients showed a likely protective missense variant in CFB (rs641153). Conclusion: We have detected for the first time rare and pathogenic TMA-associated variants in patients with severe COVID-19. Our findings of variants in complement-regulatory genes and ADAMTS13 suggest genetic susceptibility and define proof-of-concept for proper selection of patients that would benefit from complement inhibition. [Figure: see text] DISCLOSURES: Gavriilaki:Omeros Pharmaceuticals: Consultancy. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8330308 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | American Society of Hematology |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-83303082021-08-03 Thrombotic Microangiopathy Variants Are Independently Associated with Critical Disease in COVID-19 Patients Gavriilaki, Eleni Kokoris, Styliani Touloumenidou, Tasoula Koravou, Evdoxia Koutra, Maria Karali, Vassiliki Papalexandri, Lila Chatzopoulou, Fani Chatzidimitriou, Maria Chatzidimitriou, Dimitrios Veleni, Anastasia Grigoriadis, Savvas Konstantinidou, Eulampia Chloros, Diamantis Kioumis, Ioannis Kaimakamis, Evaggelos Bitzani, Milly Boumpas, Dimitrios Tsantes, Argyrios Sotiropoulos, Damianos Sakellari, Ioanna Anagnostopoulos, Achilles Blood 311.Disorders of Platelet Number or Function Background: Several recent studies support the notion of excessive complement activation in patients with severe coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19), with beneficial results of complement inhibition in case series. In this context, severe COVID-19 shares common characteristics with complement-mediated thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA). TMA is commonly characterized by genetic susceptibility, and presents with thrombocytopenia, anemia, increased lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and organ damage (renal, neurological, cardiac). Aims: We hypothesized that genetic susceptibility would be also evident in patients with severe COVID-19 and would be associated with disease severity. Methods: We prospectively studied consecutive adult patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in our referral centers (April-May 2020). Diagnosis was confirmed by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). COVID-19 severity was assessed based on World Health Organization's (WHO) criteria into moderate/severe, and critical disease. Additional data on patients' history and course were recorded by treating physicians that followed patients up to discharge or death. Patients' DNA was obtained from peripheral blood samples. Probes were designed using the Design studio (Illumina). Amplicons cover exonic regions of TMA-associated genes (Complement factor H/CFH, CFH-related, CFI, CFB, CFD, C3, CD55, C5, MCP, thombomodulin/THBD, ADAMTS13) spanning 15 bases into the intronic regions. We used 10ng of initial DNA material. Libraries were quantified using Qubit and sequenced on a MiniSeq System in a 2x150 bp run. Analysis was performed using the TruSeq Amplicon application (BaseSpace). Alignment was based on the banded Smith-Waterman algorithm in the targeted regions (specified in a manifest file). We performed variant calling with the Illumina-developed Somatic Variant Caller in germline mode and variant allele frequency higher than 20%. Both Ensembl and Refseq were used for annotation of the output files. Variants clinical significance was based on ClinVar and the current version of the Complement Database, as we have previously described. Results: We studied 60 patients, 40 with moderate/severe disease hospitalized in COVID-19 general ward (GW) and 20 with critical disease hospitalized in intensive care units (ICU). Among them, 11 patients succumbed due to COVID-19 disease. Patients laboratory characteristics are shown in Figure. In genetic analysis, patients presented heterogeneous variant profiles including pathogenic, benign, likely benign, and variants of unknown significance (median number of variants: 62, range: 51-89). Search in the Complement Database revealed seven patients, each carrying one pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant in C3, CD46, DGKE, and CFH. Based on ClinVar, we found a pathogenic variant of ADAMTS13 (rs2301612, missense) in 28 patients. We also detected two missense risk factor variants, previously detected in complement-related diseases: rs2230199 in C3 (13 patients); and rs800292 in CFH (26 patients). Among them, 22 patients had a combination of these characterized variants. This combination was significantly associated with critical disease that required intensive care (p=0.037), as well as low lymphocyte counts (p=0.021) and high neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (p=0.050). In the multivariate model, critical disease was an independent predictor of double heterozygocity in these variants. Furthermore, one patient had a rare germline missense variant in CFI (rs112534524), previously detected in complement-related diseases. This patient suffered from critical disease but survived after long-term ICU hospitalization. Interestingly, five patients showed a likely protective missense variant in CFB (rs641153). Conclusion: We have detected for the first time rare and pathogenic TMA-associated variants in patients with severe COVID-19. Our findings of variants in complement-regulatory genes and ADAMTS13 suggest genetic susceptibility and define proof-of-concept for proper selection of patients that would benefit from complement inhibition. [Figure: see text] DISCLOSURES: Gavriilaki:Omeros Pharmaceuticals: Consultancy. American Society of Hematology 2020-11-05 2021-08-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8330308/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2020-139304 Text en Copyright © 2020 American Society of Hematology. 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 | 311.Disorders of Platelet Number or Function Gavriilaki, Eleni Kokoris, Styliani Touloumenidou, Tasoula Koravou, Evdoxia Koutra, Maria Karali, Vassiliki Papalexandri, Lila Chatzopoulou, Fani Chatzidimitriou, Maria Chatzidimitriou, Dimitrios Veleni, Anastasia Grigoriadis, Savvas Konstantinidou, Eulampia Chloros, Diamantis Kioumis, Ioannis Kaimakamis, Evaggelos Bitzani, Milly Boumpas, Dimitrios Tsantes, Argyrios Sotiropoulos, Damianos Sakellari, Ioanna Anagnostopoulos, Achilles Thrombotic Microangiopathy Variants Are Independently Associated with Critical Disease in COVID-19 Patients |
title | Thrombotic Microangiopathy Variants Are Independently Associated with Critical Disease in COVID-19 Patients |
title_full | Thrombotic Microangiopathy Variants Are Independently Associated with Critical Disease in COVID-19 Patients |
title_fullStr | Thrombotic Microangiopathy Variants Are Independently Associated with Critical Disease in COVID-19 Patients |
title_full_unstemmed | Thrombotic Microangiopathy Variants Are Independently Associated with Critical Disease in COVID-19 Patients |
title_short | Thrombotic Microangiopathy Variants Are Independently Associated with Critical Disease in COVID-19 Patients |
title_sort | thrombotic microangiopathy variants are independently associated with critical disease in covid-19 patients |
topic | 311.Disorders of Platelet Number or Function |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8330308/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2020-139304 |
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