| Literature DB >> 27479636 |
So Yeon Kim, Sun Jae Park, Sook Young Cho, Ran-Hui Cha, Hyeon-Gun Jee, Gayeon Kim, Hyoung-Shik Shin, Yeonjae Kim, Yu Mi Jung, Jeong-Sun Yang, Sung Soon Kim, Sung Im Cho, Man Jin Kim, Jee-Soo Lee, Seung Jun Lee, Soo Hyun Seo, Sung Sup Park, Moon-Woo Seong.
Abstract
We evaluated the diagnostic and clinical usefulness of blood specimens to detect Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in 21 patients from the 2015 outbreak in South Korea. Viral RNA was detected in blood from 33% of patients at initial diagnosis, and the detection preceded a worse clinical course.Entities:
Keywords: MERS-CoV; Middle East respiratory syndrome; blood; coronavirus; prognosis; real-time PCR; viruses; zoonoses
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27479636 PMCID: PMC5038397 DOI: 10.3201/eid2210.160218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Demographic characteristics of 21 Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus–infected patients, South Korea, 2015
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| No. | 21 |
| Median age, y (range) | 64 (23–86) |
| Sex, no. | |
| M | 9 |
| F | 12 |
| Median hospitalization, d (range) | 17 (2–138) |
| Death rate, % | 23.8 |
| Median no. days exposed to virus (range)* | 3 (1–20) |
| Median duration between symptom onset and initial diagnosis, d (range) | 2 (0–12)† |
*Based on contact history. †Two asymptomatic patients were excluded from analysis.
Differences in Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus detection by rRT-PCR among specimen types, South Korea, 2015*
| Characteristic | Respiratory specimen type | Blood specimen type | |
|---|---|---|---|
| EDTA whole blood | Serum | ||
| No. specimens | 20 sputum; 1 endotracheal aspirate | 21 | 21 |
| Days from initial confirmatory diagnosis using respiratory specimens to blood sampling | Set as day 0 | 1.4 (median 1,
range 0–5) | 1.5 (median 1,
range 0–5) |
| Viral gene region rRT-PCR | |||
| Upstream of E | |||
| Total positive results/total tests (%) | 21/21 (100) | 6/21 (29) | 6/21 (29) |
| Median Ct (range) | 28.48 (19.70–33.46)† | 37.55 (35.34–38.07) | 36.88 (34.24–38.14) |
| Open reading frame 1a | |||
| Total positive results/total tests (%) | 21/21 (100) | 0/21 (0) | 0/21 (0) |
| Median Ct (range) | 29.28 (21.00–34.21)† | Not detected | Not detected |
| Nucleocapsid | |||
| Total positive results/total tests (%) | Not performed | 7/21 (33) | 7/21 (33) |
| Median Ct (range) | Not performed | 36.37 (35.62–38.04) | 34.62 (32.93–38.84) |
*Ct, cycle threshold; rRT-PCR, real-time reverse transcription PCR. †One patient whose Ct was not reported was excluded.
FigureDifferences in survival among Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus–infected patients, South Korea, 2015. A, B) Survival difference between the blood viral RNA-positive (solid line) and -negative (broken line) groups. Survival was defined as the time from initial confirmatory diagnosis to death before hospital discharge (A) (Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, log rank p = 0.009; Breslow p = 0.006) and as the time from symptom onset to death (B) (Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, log rank p = 0.017; Breslow p = 0.015). C, D) Survival difference between the high respiratory viral load (solid line) and low respiratory viral load (broken line) groups. Viral loads were classified into 2 groups: patients who harbored viral loads above the median load of patients and patients who harbored below. Survival was defined as time from initial confirmatory diagnosis to death. Cycle threshold (Ct) values were calculated for real-time reverse transcription PCRs targeting the upstream of envelope region (C) and open reading frame 1a region (D) (Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, log rank p = 0.739; Breslow p = 0.630). Tick marks along data lines indicate data-censored time points.