| Literature DB >> 32808808 |
Junli Liu1, Rui Lian2, Guochao Zhang3, Baojun Hou4, Chuming Wang1, Jian Dong5, Liu Yang1, Jianglan Wang1, Shangming Dai1, Libo Chen6, Guoqiang Zhang2, Xin Lu7, Ting Ye8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Studies have demonstrated the diagnostic efficiency of antibody testing in COVID-19 infection. There is limited data on the IgM/IgG changes in asymptomatic and discharged patients with reoccurring positive nucleic acid test (RPNAT). This study aims to investigate these IgM/IgG changes.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; IgM/IgG antibody; asymptomatic patient; discharged patient with reoccurring positive nucleic acid test (RPNAT)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32808808 PMCID: PMC7544917 DOI: 10.1080/07853890.2020.1811887
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Med ISSN: 0785-3890 Impact factor: 4.709
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients.
| Characteristics | COVID-19 patients ( | Asymptomatic cases ( | Suspected patients ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, Median (range), years | 56 (23,93) | 56.5 (20,94) | 48.5 (23,98) | .274 |
| Male, | 48 (59.2%) | 22 (73.3%) | 23 (57.4%) | .330 |
| Signs and symptoms, | ||||
| Fever (+) | 57 (70.3%) | 0 | 21 (52.5%) | .053 |
| Other symptoms (+) | 65 (80.2%) | 0 | 27 (67.5%) | .122 |
| Blood routine | ||||
| Leucocytes (× 109 per L; normal range 4–10) | 5.16 (4.15,6.39) | 6.22 (5.43,7.42) | 5.81 (4.88,6.86) | .005 |
| Neutrophils (× 109 per L; normal range 2–7) | 2.95 (2.48,3.87) | 4.09 (3.08,4.74) | 3.64 (2.72,4.65) | .008 |
| Lymphocytes (× 109 per L; normal range 0.8–4) | 1.47 (1.10,2.07) | 1.86 (1.41,2.54) | 1.81 (1.03,2.28) | .259 |
| RT-PCR test (+), n (%) | 81 (100%) | 30 (100%) | 0 | <.001 |
| CT (+),n (%) | 66 (81.4%) | 0 | 8 (20.0%) | <.001 |
| Time from onset to blood samples collection (days) | 7 (4,14) | 8 (7,9) | 9.5 (5,12) | .773 |
| Outcome, | ||||
| Discharge | 62 (76.5%) | 30 (100%) | 32 (80.0%) | .005 |
| Hospitalisation | 19 (23.5%) | 0 | 8 (20.0%) | .005 |
| Death | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1.0 |
Other symptoms: dry cough, fatigue, dyspnoea, stuffy nose, sore throat, myalgia, diarrhoea and so on. CT: Computed Tomography. CT abnormality: Ground-glass opacities, consolidation, or both affecting at least one lobe. All suspected patients were eventually excluded from diagnosis due to comprehensive clinical judgement as well as multiple negative RT-PCR test.
Figure 1.Patients flow and enrolment. *Asymptomatic case: a nucleic acid test positive case with normal body temperature , no discomfort and without pneumonia imaging from admission to discharge. #Discharged patient who was retested positive: After the patient was discharged from the hospital, nucleic acid retest turned positive.
Figure 2.ROC curves of different testing items.
Comparison of IgM/IgG levels at different time points between asymptomatic and symptomatic COVID-19 patients.
| Asymptomatic patients ( | Symptomatic patients ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Male, | 22 (73.35) | 48 (59.2) | .172 |
| Age, Median (range), years | 56.5 (20,94) | 56 (23,93) | .566 |
| Time point of blood collection* | 8 (7,9) | 7 (4,14) | .452 |
| IgM | 0.37 (0.24,0.78) | 1.80 (0.57,4.92) | <.001 |
| IgG | 0.38 (0.17,1.45) | 6.73 (1.73,13.88) | <.001 |
*Time point of blood collection for asymptomatic patients: from the day of close contact with the confirmed patient to blood samples collection. Time point of blood collection for symptomatic patients: time from symptom onset to blood samples collection.
Comparison of IgM/IgG levels in asymptomatic group before and after RT-PCR turned negative.
| RT-PCR (+) | RT-PCR (–) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| IgM | 0.37(0.24,0.78) | 0.67(0.37,0.91) | .105 |
| IgG | 0.38(0.17,1.45) | 0.73(0.35,1.65) | .193 |
Figure 3.Dynamic changes of IgM/IgG levels in asymptomatic and symptomatic group. *Time point of blood collection for asymptomatic patients: from the day of close contact with the confirmed patient to blood samples collection. #Time point of blood collection for symptomatic patients: time from symptom onset to blood samples collection
Comparison of clinical and laboratorial characteristics in RPNAT and Non-RPNAT group at the time of retest.
| RPNAT ( | Non-RPNAT ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Male, n(%) | 11 (73.3%) | 24 (61.5%) | .42 |
| Age, Median (range), years | 48 (34,77) | 55 (28,89) | .374 |
| Current smoker | 2 (13.3%) | 3 (7.7%) | .61 |
| Time from onset to blood samples collection(days) | 17 (15,18) | 16 (12,20) | .713 |
| Clinical classification | |||
| Mild cases | 5 (33.3%) | 9 (23.1%) | .441 |
| Common cases | 9 (60.0%) | 26 (66.6%) | .646 |
| Severe cases | 1 (6.6%) | 4 (10.2%) | 1.0 |
| Chest CT | 10 (66.6%) | 15 (62.5%) | .79 |
| Leucocytes (× 109 per L; normal range 3.69–9.16) | 5.53(4.17,7.05) | 5.26 (4.04,6.79) | .499 |
| Neutrophils (× 109 per L; normal range 2–7) | 3.15(2.63,5.34) | 2.91(2.06,3.98) | .297 |
| Lymphocytes (× 109 per L; normal range 0.8–4) | 1.41(1.1,2.08) | 1.73(1.18,2.26) | .311 |
RPNAT: reoccurring positive nucleic acid test; Non-RPNAT: non-reoccurring positive nucleic acid test.
Comparison of IgM/IgG levels in RPNAT and Non-RPNAT group at different time points.
| RPNAT ( | Non-RPNAT ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Time on admission | |||
| IgM | 4.33 (0.75,9.04) | 1.96 (0.41,4.59) | .220 |
| IgG | 7.69 (3.65,10.26) | 5.87 (0.79,18.87) | .511 |
| Time on discharge | |||
| IgM | 2.79 (0.95,5.37) | 0.59 (0.33,1.22) | .005 |
| IgG | 8.59 (3.36,10.36) | 6.25 (2.14, 9.47) | .434 |
| Time on retest | |||
| IgM | 2.35 (0.88,8.65) | 0.92 (0.51,1.58) | .004 |
| IgG | 17.23 (6.89,24.31) | 6.20 (1.92,11.48) | .005 |