Department of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery, The First Hospital of Jilin University, Jilin University, Changchun 130021, Jilin, China.
Department of Intensive Care Unit, The First Hospital of Jilin University, Jilin University, Changchun 130021, Jilin, China.
Clin Chim Acta. 2020 Sep;508:122-129. doi: 10.1016/j.cca.2020.05.027. Epub 2020 May 14.
The underlying changes of peripheral blood inflammatory cells (PBICs) in COVID-19 patients are little known. Moreover, the risk factors for the underlying changes of PBICs and their predicting role in severe COVID-19 patients remain uncertain.
This retrospective study including two cohorts: the main cohort enrolling 45 patients of severe type serving as study group, and the secondary cohort enrolling 12 patients of no-severe type serving as control group. The PBICs analysis was based on blood routine and lymphocyte subsets. The inflammatory cell levels were compared among patients according to clinical classifications, disease-associated phases, as well as one-month outcomes.
Compared with patients of non-severe type, the patients of severe type suffered from significantly decreased counts of lymphocytes, eosinophils, basophils, but increased counts of neutrophils. These PBICs alterations got improved in recovery phase, but persisted or got worse in aggravated phase. Compared with patients in discharged group, the patients in un-discharged/died group suffered from decreased counts of total T lymphocytes, CD4 + T lymphocytes, CD8 + T lymphocytes, as well as NK cells at 2 weeks after treatment. Clinical classification-critically severe was the independently risk factor for lymphopenia (OR = 7.701, 95%CI:1.265-46.893, P = 0.027), eosinopenia (OR = 5.595, 95%CI:1.008-31.054, P = 0.049), and worse one-month outcome (OR = 8.984; 95%CI:1.021-79.061, P = 0.048).
Lymphopenia and eosinopenia may serve as predictors of disease severity and disease progression in COVID-19 patients, and enhancing the cellular immunity may contribute to COVID-19 treatment. Thus, PBICs might become a sentinel of COVID-19, and it deserves attention during COVID-19 treatment.
目前人们对 COVID-19 患者外周血炎性细胞(PBICs)的潜在变化知之甚少。此外,PBICs 潜在变化的危险因素及其对重症 COVID-19 患者的预测作用尚不确定。
本回顾性研究包括两个队列:主要队列纳入 45 例重症患者作为研究组,次要队列纳入 12 例非重症患者作为对照组。PBICs 分析基于血常规和淋巴细胞亚群。根据临床分类、疾病相关阶段以及一个月的结果,比较患者之间的炎性细胞水平。
与非重症患者相比,重症患者的淋巴细胞、嗜酸性粒细胞和嗜碱性粒细胞计数明显减少,而中性粒细胞计数增加。这些 PBICs 改变在恢复期得到改善,但在加重期持续或恶化。与出院组相比,治疗后 2 周未出院/死亡组患者的总 T 淋巴细胞、CD4+T 淋巴细胞、CD8+T 淋巴细胞和 NK 细胞计数减少。临床分类为危重型是淋巴细胞减少(OR=7.701,95%CI:1.265-46.893,P=0.027)、嗜酸性粒细胞减少(OR=5.595,95%CI:1.008-31.054,P=0.049)和较差的一个月预后(OR=8.984;95%CI:1.021-79.061,P=0.048)的独立危险因素。
淋巴细胞减少和嗜酸性粒细胞减少可能是 COVID-19 患者疾病严重程度和疾病进展的预测指标,增强细胞免疫可能有助于 COVID-19 的治疗。因此,PBICs 可能成为 COVID-19 的一个指标,在 COVID-19 治疗期间值得关注。