Department of Pathology, Erasme Hospital, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Route de Lennik 808, 1070, Brussels, Belgium.
Centre Universitaire inter Régional d'expertise en Anatomie Pathologique Hospitalière (CurePath, CHIREC, CHU Tivoli, ULB), Rue de Borfilet 12A, 6040, Jumet, Belgium.
Crit Care. 2020 Aug 12;24(1):495. doi: 10.1186/s13054-020-03218-5.
Post-mortem studies can provide important information for understanding new diseases and small autopsy case series have already reported different findings in COVID-19 patients.
We evaluated whether some specific post-mortem features are observed in these patients and if these changes are related to the presence of the virus in different organs. Complete macroscopic and microscopic autopsies were performed on different organs in 17 COVID-19 non-survivors. Presence of SARS-CoV-2 was evaluated with immunohistochemistry (IHC) in lung samples and with real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test in the lung and other organs.
Pulmonary findings revealed early-stage diffuse alveolar damage (DAD) in 15 out of 17 patients and microthrombi in small lung arteries in 11 patients. Late-stage DAD, atypical pneumocytes, and/or acute pneumonia were also observed. Four lung infarcts, two acute myocardial infarctions, and one ischemic enteritis were observed. There was no evidence of myocarditis, hepatitis, or encephalitis. Kidney evaluation revealed the presence of hemosiderin in tubules or pigmented casts in most patients. Spongiosis and vascular congestion were the most frequently encountered brain lesions. No specific SARS-CoV-2 lesions were observed in any organ. IHC revealed positive cells with a heterogeneous distribution in the lungs of 11 of the 17 (65%) patients; RT-PCR yielded a wide distribution of SARS-CoV-2 in different tissues, with 8 patients showing viral presence in all tested organs (i.e., lung, heart, spleen, liver, colon, kidney, and brain).
In conclusion, autopsies revealed a great heterogeneity of COVID-19-associated organ injury and the remarkable absence of any specific viral lesions, even when RT-PCR identified the presence of the virus in many organs.
尸检研究可为了解新疾病提供重要信息,小型尸检病例系列已报告 COVID-19 患者存在不同的发现。
我们评估了这些患者是否存在某些特定的尸检特征,以及这些变化是否与病毒在不同器官中的存在有关。对 17 例 COVID-19 非幸存者的不同器官进行了完整的大体和显微镜检查。通过免疫组织化学(IHC)在肺样本中评估 SARS-CoV-2 的存在,并通过实时逆转录聚合酶链反应(RT-PCR)测试在肺和其他器官中评估病毒的存在。
肺部发现 17 例患者中有 15 例出现早期弥漫性肺泡损伤(DAD),11 例出现小肺血管微血栓。还观察到晚期 DAD、非典型肺泡细胞和/或急性肺炎。观察到 4 例肺梗死、2 例急性心肌梗死和 1 例缺血性肠炎。没有心肌炎、肝炎或脑炎的证据。肾脏评估显示大多数患者的肾小管中有含铁血黄素或色素沉着的铸型。海绵状变性和血管充血是最常见的脑病变。任何器官均未观察到特定的 SARS-CoV-2 病变。IHC 显示 17 例中的 11 例(65%)患者肺部存在异质分布的阳性细胞;RT-PCR 在不同组织中广泛分布 SARS-CoV-2,8 例患者在所有检测的器官(即肺、心脏、脾脏、肝脏、结肠、肾脏和大脑)中均存在病毒。
总之,尸检显示 COVID-19 相关器官损伤存在很大的异质性,即使 RT-PCR 确定了病毒在许多器官中的存在,也没有发现任何特定的病毒病变。