289. Post COVID Syndrome Cohort Characterization
Author(s) -
Bhoomija Chatwani,
Shelby Flaherty,
Sharon Liu,
Marc Theberge,
Mark Zeller,
Kristian Anderson,
Matthew L. Boisen,
Luis M. Branco,
Robert F. Garry,
Arnaud Drouin,
Dahlene N. Fusco
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
open forum infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.546
H-Index - 35
ISSN - 2328-8957
DOI - 10.1093/ofid/ofab466.491
Subject(s) - medicine , cohort , univariate analysis , covid-19 , pediatrics , cohort study , physical therapy , multivariate analysis , disease , infectious disease (medical specialty)
Background Post COVID Syndrome (PCS) is significant morbidity following COVID-19. This study aims to identify biomarkers that predict PCS in a Gulf Coast cohort known for poor health outcomes. Methods Since March 2020 the study Collection of Serum and Secretions for SARS CoV-2 Countermeasure Development (aka ClinSeqSer) has been enrolling subjects with confirmed acute COVID-19, with initial visit at 1 month and follow up every three months from symptom onset. At follow-up, subjects complete symptom questionnaire, physical examination, nasopharyngeal swab/saliva collection, blood draw. Subjects with >= one symptom new since COVID are PCS, remainder are Non-PCS experienced at initial one month visit and six months or longer. Univariate and bivariate analysis was carried out to study significant associations of currently available dataset (N=60). Figure 1. Post-COVID Symptoms Included if “new since covid”. For 60 subjects consented post-covid with completed questionnaire, results were analyzed. Most common symptoms reported were fatigue/tiredness or exhaustion (52%), muscle aches (38%), difficulty concentrating (33%) and headache (32%) as the most common symptoms during one month prior to their initial follow-up visit. The persistent symptoms experienced for six months or longer were fatigue/tiredness or exhaustion (25%), forgetfulness (22%), muscle aches (18%), and sleep difficulties (18%). Results Cohort is 36 (60%) female, 24 (40%) male, age group of 49 (82%) 18-64 years, 11 (18%) 65+ years, 33 (55%) African American, 27 (45%) Caucasian. Median follow-up time after symptom onset: 290 days. Study cohort reported fatigue (52%), myalgias (38%), difficulty concentrating (33%), headache (32%) as most common symptoms during first month from initial symptom onset. Persistent symptoms ( >=6 months) are fatigue (25%), forgetfulness (22%), myalgias (18%), sleep difficulties (18%). Bivariate analysis shows that gender (female, P=0.04), past stroke/transient ischemic attack (P=0.04), deep venous thrombosis (P=0.02), abnormal kidney function (P=0.01) associate with PCS. Convalescent antibodies (ReSARS N IgG, S-RBD IgG) were measured and percentage inhibition of ACE2 spike interaction was recorded. Plasma inflammatory protein levels were measured using multiplex ELISA and Proximity Extension Assay technology during follow-up visit. Increased antibody ReSARS N IgG (2.91, 0.74-10.93; P=0.02) response and higher convalescent IL-10 (P=0.04) was associated with PCS. Percent inhibition of ACE2: spike interaction was not associated (P=0.79) with PCS. Nasal swab/saliva SARS-COV-2 sequencing has not identified a specific SARS-CoV-2 virus mutation predictive of PCS. Table 1. Demographic and Clinical Characteristics The bivariate analysis results showed that the gender (female, P=0.0354), history of stroke or transient ischemic attack (P=0.0382), chest pain from narrow heart vessels (P=0.0479), deep venous thrombosis (P=0.0241) and abnormal kidney function (P=0.0142) were associated with Post-COVID syndrome. Table 2. Antibodies and ACE2 spike inhibition. The convalescent antibodies, ReSARS N IgG and S-RBD IgG were measured in U/mL and percentage inhibition of ACE2 spike interaction was recorded during follow-up visit for PCS vs Non-PCS subjects. The increased antibody ReSARS N IgG (2.91, 0.74-10.93; P=0.0159) response was associated with Post-COVID syndrome. Percent inhibition of ACE2: spike interaction was not associated (P=0.7932) with PCS. Table 3. Plasma inflammatory protein levels. Plasma inflammatory protein levels were measured using multiplex ELISA (MSD) and Proximity Extension Assay technology (Olink) recorded during follow-up visit for PCS vs Non-PCS subjects, revealing IL-10 (P=0.0379) was associated with development of PCS. Conclusion This study identifies initial clinical and biomarker predictors of PCS in a cohort that is 55% African American. Figure 2. Antibody ReSARS N IgG ReSARS N IgG measured in post-covid patients is significantly associated with post-COVID syndrome(P=0.0159). X axis: number of months from symptom onset to blood draw. Y axis: N IgG U/mL. Figure 3. Spike amino acid mutations Spike amino acid mutations detected in SARS-CoV-2 from acute-phase respiratory isolates. Nasal swab/saliva samples were collected from subjects with acute COVID-19 at time of enrollment into ClinSeqSer, stored at -80°C followed by RNA isolation and SARS-CoV-2 qRT-PCR. Samples with Ct value of ≤30 were then sequenced using NextSeq (Illumina). All sequences are deposited on GISAID and under BioProject (ID PRJNA681020). X axis: subject ID, with ID number increasing chronologically. Y axis: amino acid position of each mutation moving from N- to C-terminus. Disclosures Robert Garry, PhD, Zalgen Labs (Shareholder)
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