Clinical and Autoimmune Characteristics of Severe and Critical Cases of COVID‐19

Yaqing Zhou(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Tao Han(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Jiaxin Chen(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Can Hou(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Lei Hua(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Shu He(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Yi Guo(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Sheng Zhang(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Yanjun Wang(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Jinxia Yuan(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Chenhui Zhao(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Jing Zhang(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Qiaowei Jia(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Xiangrong Zuo(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Jinhai Li(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Lian‐Sheng Wang(Jiangsu Province Hospital), Quan Cao(Jiangsu Province Hospital), En‐Zhi Jia(Jiangsu Province Hospital)
Clinical and Translational Science
April 21, 2020
Cited by 303Open Access
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Abstract

In this study we report on the clinical and autoimmune characteristics of severe and critical novel coronavirus pneumonia caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The clinical, autoimmune, and laboratory characteristics of 21 patients who had laboratory-confirmed severe and critical cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) from the intensive care unit of the Huangshi Central Hospital, Hubei Province, China, were investigated. A total of 21 patients (13 men and 8 women), including 8 (38.1%) severe cases and 13 (61.9%) critical cases, were enrolled. Cough (90.5%) and fever (81.0%) were the dominant symptoms, and most patients (76.2%) had at least one coexisting disorder on admission. The most common characteristics on chest computed tomography were ground-glass opacity (100%) and bilateral patchy shadowing (76.2%). The most common findings on laboratory measurement were lymphocytopenia (85.7%) and elevated levels of C-reactive protein (94.7%) and interleukin-6 (89.5%). The prevalence of anti-52 kDa SSA/Ro antibody, anti-60 kDa SSA/Ro antibody, and antinuclear antibody was 20%, 25%, and 50%, respectively. We also retrospectively analyzed the clinical and laboratory data from 21 severe and critical cases of COVID-19. Autoimmune phenomena exist in COVID-19 subjects, and the present results provide the rationale for a strategy of preventing immune dysfunction and optimal immunosuppressive therapy.


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