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新冠病毒感染患者的病毒再激活和合并感染:系统评价。

Viral reactivations and co-infections in COVID-19 patients: a systematic review.

机构信息

Knowledge Translation Program, Evidence and Intelligence for Action in Health Department, Pan American Health Organization, Washington, DC, USA.

Incident Management System for the COVID-19 Response, Pan American Health Organization, Washington, DC, USA.

出版信息

BMC Infect Dis. 2023 Apr 26;23(1):259. doi: 10.1186/s12879-023-08117-y.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Viral reactivations and co-infections have been reported among COVID-19 patients. However, studies on the clinical outcomes of different viral reactivations and co-infections are currently in limit. Thus, the primary purpose of this review is to perform an overarching investigation on the cases of latent virus reactivation and co-infection in COVID-19 patients to build collective evidence contributing to improving patient health. The aim of the study was to conduct a literature review to compare the patient characteristics and outcomes of reactivations and co-infections of different viruses.

METHODS

Our population of interest included confirmed COVID-19 patients who were diagnosed with a viral infection either concurrently or following their COVID-19 diagnosis. We extracted the relevant literature through a systematic search using the key terms in the online databases including the EMBASE, MEDLINE, Latin American Caribbean Health Sciences Literature (LILACS), from inception onwards up to June 2022. The authors independently extracted data from eligible studies and assessed the risk of bias using the Consensus-based Clinical Case Reporting (CARE) guidelines and the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS). Main patient characteristics, frequency of each manifestation, and diagnostic criteria used in studies were summarized in tables.

RESULTS

In total, 53 articles were included in this review. We identified 40 reactivation studies, 8 coinfection studies, and 5 studies where concomitant infection in COVID-19 patients was not distinguished as either reactivation or coinfection. Data were extracted for 12 viruses including IAV, IBV, EBV, CMV, VZV, HHV-1, HHV-2, HHV-6, HHV-7, HHV-8, HBV, and Parvovirus B19. EBV, HHV-1, and CMV were most frequently observed within the reactivation cohort, whereas IAV and EBV within the coinfection cohort. In both reactivation and coinfection groups, patients reported cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and immunosuppression as comorbidities, acute kidney injury as complication, and lymphopenia and elevated D-dimer and CRP levels from blood tests. Common pharmaceutical interventions in two groups included steroids and antivirals.

CONCLUSION

Overall, these findings expand our knowledge on the characteristics of COVID-19 patients with viral reactivations and co-infections. Our experience with current review indicates a need for further investigations on virus reactivation and coinfection among COVID-19 patients.

摘要

背景

已报道 COVID-19 患者中存在病毒再激活和合并感染。然而,目前对于不同病毒再激活和合并感染的临床结局的研究仍有限。因此,本综述的主要目的是对 COVID-19 患者潜伏病毒再激活和合并感染的病例进行全面调查,以积累有助于改善患者健康的证据。本研究旨在进行文献回顾,比较不同病毒再激活和合并感染患者的特征和结局。

方法

我们的研究对象包括确诊的 COVID-19 患者,这些患者在 COVID-19 诊断的同时或之后被诊断患有病毒感染。我们通过系统搜索,使用在线数据库中的关键词(包括 EMBASE、MEDLINE、拉丁美洲加勒比健康科学文献[LILACS])提取相关文献,检索时间从建库开始至 2022 年 6 月。作者独立地从合格研究中提取数据,并使用共识临床病例报告(CARE)指南和纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表(NOS)评估偏倚风险。总结了研究中主要患者特征、每种表现的频率和使用的诊断标准。

结果

本综述共纳入 53 篇文章。我们发现了 40 项再激活研究、8 项合并感染研究和 5 项研究未将 COVID-19 患者的合并感染区分再激活或合并感染。共提取了 12 种病毒的数据,包括流感病毒(IAV)、副流感病毒(IBV)、EB 病毒(EBV)、巨细胞病毒(CMV)、水痘带状疱疹病毒(VZV)、单纯疱疹病毒 1 型(HHV-1)、单纯疱疹病毒 2 型(HHV-2)、人类疱疹病毒 6 型(HHV-6)、人类疱疹病毒 7 型(HHV-7)、人类疱疹病毒 8 型(HHV-8)、乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)和细小病毒 B19。再激活队列中最常观察到 EBV、HHV-1 和 CMV,而合并感染队列中最常观察到 IAV 和 EBV。在再激活和合并感染两组中,患者报告的合并症包括心血管疾病、糖尿病和免疫抑制,并发症包括急性肾损伤,血液检查显示淋巴细胞减少和 D-二聚体和 CRP 水平升高。两组中常用的药物干预包括类固醇和抗病毒药物。

结论

总的来说,这些发现扩展了我们对 COVID-19 患者病毒再激活和合并感染特征的认识。我们对本次综述的经验表明,需要进一步研究 COVID-19 患者的病毒再激活和合并感染。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/75e2/10131452/e99eb181445d/12879_2023_8117_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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