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SARS-CoV-2 RNAemia Predicts Clinical Deterioration and Extrapulmonary Complications from COVID-19

Title: SARS-CoV-2 RNAemia Predicts Clinical Deterioration and Extrapulmonary Complications from COVID-19
Authors: Ram-Mohan, Nikhil; Kim, David; Zudock, Elizabeth J; Hashemi, Marjan M; Tjandra, Kristel C; Rogers, Angela J; Blish, Catherine A; Nadeau, Kari C; Newberry, Jennifer A; Quinn, James V; O’Hara, Ruth; Ashley, Euan; Nguyen, Hien; Jiang, Lingxia; Hung, Paul; Blomkalns, Andra L; Yang, Samuel; Mann, Rosen; Visweswaran, Anita; Ranganath, Thanmayi; Roque, Jonasel; Manohar, Monali; Din, Hena Naz; Kumar, Komal; Jee, Kathryn; Noon, Brigit; Anderson, Jill; Fay, Bethany; Schreiber, Donald; Zhao, Nancy; Vergara, Rosemary; McKechnie, Julia; Wilk, Aaron; de la Parte, Lauren; Dantzler, Kathleen Whittle; Ty, Maureen; Kathale, Nimish; Rustagi, Arjun; Martinez-Colon, Giovanny; Ivison, Geoff; Pi, Ruoxi; Lee, Maddie; Brewer, Rachel; Hollis, Taylor; Baird, Andrea; Ugur, Michele; Bogusch, Drina; Nahass, George R; Haider, Kazim; Tran, Kim Quyen Thi; Simpson, Laura; Tal, Michal; Chang, Iris; Do, Evan; Fernandes, Andrea; Lee, Alexandra S; Ahuja, Neera; Snow, Theo; Krempski, James
Source: Clinical Infectious Diseases, vol 74, iss 2
Publisher Information: eScholarship, University of California
Publication Year: 2022
Collection: University of California: eScholarship
Subject Terms: 32 Biomedical and Clinical Sciences (for-2020); 3202 Clinical Sciences (for-2020); Infectious Diseases (rcdc); Coronaviruses Diagnostics and Prognostics (rcdc); Emerging Infectious Diseases (rcdc); Coronaviruses (rcdc); Lung (rcdc); 4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies (hrcs-rac); 3 Good Health and Well Being (sdg); SARS-CoV-2; RNAemia; digital PCR; severity prediction; extrapulmonary complications; Stanford COVID-19 Biobank Study Group; 06 Biological Sciences (for); 11 Medical and Health Sciences (for); Microbiology (science-metrix)
Subject Geographic: 218 - 226
Description: BACKGROUND: The determinants of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) disease severity and extrapulmonary complications (EPCs) are poorly understood. We characterized relationships between severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) RNAemia and disease severity, clinical deterioration, and specific EPCs. METHODS: We used quantitative and digital polymerase chain reaction (qPCR and dPCR) to quantify SARS-CoV-2 RNA from plasma in 191 patients presenting to the emergency department with COVID-19. We recorded patient symptoms, laboratory markers, and clinical outcomes, with a focus on oxygen requirements over time. We collected longitudinal plasma samples from a subset of patients. We characterized the role of RNAemia in predicting clinical severity and EPCs using elastic net regression. RESULTS: Of SARS-CoV-2-positive patients, 23.0% (44 of 191) had viral RNA detected in plasma by dPCR, compared with 1.4% (2 of 147) by qPCR. Most patients with serial measurements had undetectable RNAemia within 10 days of symptom onset, reached maximum clinical severity within 16 days, and symptom resolution within 33 days. Initially RNAemic patients were more likely to manifest severe disease (odds ratio, 6.72 [95% confidence interval, 2.45-19.79]), worsening of disease severity (2.43 [1.07-5.38]), and EPCs (2.81 [1.26-6.36]). RNA loads were correlated with maximum severity (r = 0.47 [95% confidence interval, .20-.67]). CONCLUSIONS: dPCR is more sensitive than qPCR for the detection of SARS-CoV-2 RNAemia, which is a robust predictor of eventual COVID-19 severity and oxygen requirements, as well as EPCs. Because many COVID-19 therapies are initiated on the basis of oxygen requirements, RNAemia on presentation might serve to direct early initiation of appropriate therapies for the patients most likely to deteriorate.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: unknown
Relation: qt4mc7z08g; https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4mc7z08g; https://escholarship.org/content/qt4mc7z08g/qt4mc7z08g.pdf
DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciab394
Availability: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4mc7z08g; https://escholarship.org/content/qt4mc7z08g/qt4mc7z08g.pdf; https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciab394
Rights: CC-BY-NC-ND
Accession Number: edsbas.B0D1E24B
Database: BASE