Department of Pathology and Molecular Pathology, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Department of Cardiology, University Heart Center, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
J Pathol Clin Res. 2021 Mar;7(2):135-143. doi: 10.1002/cjp2.189. Epub 2020 Nov 13.
Similar to the influenza A pandemic in 1918/1919, the new Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has spread globally. The causes of death in COVID-19 are frequently compared to a seasonal influenza outbreak. Complete COVID-19 autopsy studies were almost non-existent in the first months of the outbreak and are still rare with respect to the number of deaths. It has been recently reported that capillary microthrombi are significantly more prevalent in patients with COVID-19 than in patients with influenza A. To date, the contribution of macrothrombi, i.e. visible thrombi in pulmonary arteries, to the death of patients with influenza A in comparison to COVID-19 remains unaddressed. Here, we report autopsy findings in 411 patients who died from the 'Spanish' influenza A pandemic between May 1918 and April 1919 at the University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland. We compare these results with influenza A autopsies from 2009 to 2020, other influenza A autopsy series and all COVID-19 autopsies published to date. No descriptions of any macroscopic thromboembolic events were mentioned in influenza A autopsy reports. In 75 published COVID-19 autopsies, pulmonary artery thrombosis/embolism was reported in 36%. The direct comparison of macroscopic autopsy findings suggests a significantly greater degree of grossly visible pulmonary macrothrombi in patients with COVID-19 in comparison to influenza A autopsies even though most patients received empiric thromboprophylaxis. This is consistent with the concept of a SARS-related de novo coagulopathy with generalised in situ clot formation, which could explain the high incidence of pulmonary thrombosis/embolism with or without underlying deep vein thrombosis and in the absence of a history of venous thromboembolic events.
类似于 1918/1919 年的流感大流行,新型冠状病毒病 2019(COVID-19)已在全球范围内传播。COVID-19 的死亡原因经常与季节性流感爆发进行比较。在疫情爆发的头几个月,COVID-19 的完整尸检研究几乎不存在,而且相对于死亡人数而言,尸检研究仍然很少。最近有报道称,COVID-19 患者的毛细血管微血栓比流感 A 患者更为常见。迄今为止,对于流感 A 患者与 COVID-19 患者相比,大动脉血栓(即肺动脉内可见的血栓)对患者死亡的贡献仍未得到解决。在这里,我们报告了在瑞士苏黎世大学医院死于 1918 年 5 月至 1919 年 4 月期间的“西班牙”流感大流行的 411 例患者的尸检结果。我们将这些结果与 2009 年至 2020 年的流感 A 尸检、其他流感 A 尸检系列以及迄今为止发表的所有 COVID-19 尸检进行了比较。在流感 A 尸检报告中没有提到任何宏观血栓栓塞事件的描述。在 75 篇已发表的 COVID-19 尸检中,有 36%报告了肺动脉血栓/栓塞。宏观尸检结果的直接比较表明,COVID-19 患者的肉眼可见的肺部大血栓明显多于流感 A 尸检,尽管大多数患者接受了经验性的血栓预防治疗。这与 SARS 相关的新发性凝血病概念一致,该概念导致广泛存在原位血栓形成,这可以解释在没有静脉血栓栓塞事件史的情况下,肺血栓形成/栓塞的高发生率,无论是否存在深静脉血栓形成。