Hany Mohamed, Sheta Eman, Talha Ahmed, Anwar Medhat, Selima Mohamed, Gaballah Muhammad, Zidan Ahmed, Ibrahim Mohamed, Agayby Ann Samy Shafiq, Abouelnasr Anwar Ashraf, Samir Mohamed, Torensma Bart
Department of Surgery, Medical Research Institute, Alexandria University, Hadara, Alexandria 21561, Egypt.
Department of Pathology, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Egypt.
Endosc Int Open. 2024 Jan 5;12(1):E11-E22. doi: 10.1055/a-2180-9872. eCollection 2024 Jan.
Gut infection is common during acute COVID-19, and persistent SARS-CoV-2 gut infection has been reported months after the initial infection, potentially linked to long-COVID syndrome. This study tested the incidence of persistent gut infection in patients with a history of COVID-19 undergoing endoscopic examination. Endoscopic biopsies were prospectively collected from patients with previous COVID-19 infection undergoing upper or lower gastrointestinal endoscopy (UGE or LGE). Immunohistochemistry was used to detect the presence of persistent SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid proteins. A total of 166 UGEs and 83 LGE were analyzed. No significant differences were observed between patients with positive and negative immunostaining regarding the number of previous COVID-19 infections, time since the last infection, symptoms, or vaccination status. The incidence of positive immunostaining was significantly higher in UGE biopsies than in LGE biopsies (37.34% vs. 16.87%, =0.002). Smokers showed a significantly higher incidence of positive immunostaining in the overall cohort and UGE and LGE subgroups ( <0.001). Diabetic patients exhibited a significantly higher incidence in the overall cohort ( =0.002) and UGE subgroup ( =0.022), with a similar trend observed in the LGE subgroup ( =0.055). Gut mucosal tissues can act as a long-term reservoir for SARS-CoV-2, retaining viral particles for months following the primary COVID-19 infection. Smokers and individuals with diabetes may be at an increased risk of persistent viral gut infection. These findings provide insights into the dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 infection in the gut and have implications for further research.
肠道感染在急性新冠肺炎期间很常见,并且有报道称在初次感染数月后仍存在持续性严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)肠道感染,这可能与长期新冠综合征有关。本研究检测了有新冠肺炎病史且接受内镜检查的患者中持续性肠道感染的发生率。前瞻性地收集了接受上消化道或下消化道内镜检查(UGE或LGE)的既往感染过新冠肺炎患者的内镜活检组织。采用免疫组织化学法检测持续性SARS-CoV-2核衣壳蛋白的存在情况。共分析了166例上消化道内镜检查和83例下消化道内镜检查的结果。在免疫染色呈阳性和阴性的患者之间,就既往新冠肺炎感染次数、上次感染后的时间、症状或疫苗接种状况而言,未观察到显著差异。上消化道内镜活检组织中免疫染色阳性的发生率显著高于下消化道内镜活检组织(37.34%对16.87%,P=0.002)。在整个队列以及上消化道内镜和下消化道内镜亚组中,吸烟者免疫染色阳性的发生率显著更高(P<0.001)。糖尿病患者在整个队列(P=0.002)和上消化道内镜亚组(P=0.022)中表现出显著更高的发生率,在下消化道内镜亚组中也观察到类似趋势(P=0.055)。肠道黏膜组织可作为SARS-CoV-2的长期储存库,在初次新冠肺炎感染后数月仍保留病毒颗粒。吸烟者和糖尿病患者可能有持续性病毒肠道感染的风险增加。这些发现为SARS-CoV-2在肠道中的感染动态提供了见解,并对进一步研究具有启示意义。