| Literature DB >> 34287285 |
Donovan A McGrowder1, Fabian Miller2,3, Melisa Anderson Cross4, Lennox Anderson-Jackson1, Sophia Bryan5, Lowell Dilworth1.
Abstract
Globally, millions of persons have contracted the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) over the past several months, resulting in significant mortality. Health care systems are negatively impacted including the care of individuals with cancers and other chronic diseases such as chronic active hepatitis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. There are various probable pathogenic mechanisms that have been presented to account for liver injury in COVID-19 patients such as hepatotoxicity cause by therapeutic drugs, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection of the bile duct cells and hepatocytes, hypoxia and systemic inflammatory response. Liver biochemistry tests such as aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) are deranged in COVID-19 patients with liver injury. Hepatocellular damage results in the elevation of serum AST and ALT levels in early onset disease while a cholestatic pattern that develops as the disease progress causes higher levels of ALP, GGT, direct and total bilirubin. These liver biochemistry tests are prognostic markers of disease severity and should be carefully monitored in COVID-19 patients. We conducted a systematic review of abnormal liver biochemistry tests in COVID-19 and the possible pathogenesis involved. Significant findings regarding the severity, hepatocellular pattern, incidence and related clinical outcomes in COVID-19 patients are highlighted.Entities:
Keywords: acute; biochemistry; coronavirus; disease; function; infection; injury; liver; mortality; severity; tests
Year: 2021 PMID: 34287285 PMCID: PMC8293258 DOI: 10.3390/diseases9030050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diseases ISSN: 2079-9721
Figure 1Flow diagram showing the article selection process.
Figure 2Possible mechanisms of hepatic injury in COVID-19 infection.
Abnormal liver biochemistry tests in COVID-19 patients with severe illness.
| Reference | Liver Biochemistry Test | Type of Study/Number of Articles | Study Design | Sample Size | Main Findings/Incidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xin et al., 2020 [ | AST, ALT and total bilirubin | Review (8 articles) | Systematic review and meta-analysis | 7467 | The ORs for severe COVID-19 patients were 2.35 (ALT), 3.21 (AST) and 1.87 (total bilirubin). |
| Kaushik et al., 2020 [ | AST, ALT and total bilirubin | Original | Cross-sectional | 105 | Prevalence of abnormal LFTs is 59.04%. The RR for AST is 2.91, 2.32 for ALT and 1.95 for total bilirubin in severe COVID-19. |
| Wu et al., 2020 [ | ALT, AST, GGT, ALP and total bilirubin | Review (45 articles) | Systematic review and meta-analysis | - | Pooled incidence of abnormal LFTs at admission was 27.2%. Severe patients had a significantly higher pooled incidence of abnormal LFTs (ALT, AST, GGT, ALP and total bilirubin). |
| Kumar-M [ | ALT, AST, GGT and albumin | Review (128 articles) | Systematic review and meta-analysis | - | The RRs for severe COVID-19 patients were 1.76 (ALT), 2.30 (AST), 2.31 (GGT), and for albumin, 2.65. |
| Sultan et al., 2020 [ | ALT and AST | Review (47 articles) | Systematic review and meta-analysis | 10,890 | The pooled prevalence estimates of 15.0% for AST and 15.0% for ALT in hospitalized COVID-19 patients. |
| Cholankeril et al., 2020 [ | ALT, AST, GGT and total bilirubin | Original | Retrospective | 116 | 40% of patients had abnormal liver function tests (ALT, AST, GGT and total bilirubin). |
| Hajifathalian et al., 2020 [ | ALT, AST, GGT and total bilirubin | Original | Retrospective | 1059 | 62% presented with at least one elevated liver enzyme. |
| Schattenberg et al., 2020 [ | ALT and AST | Original | Case series | 44 | 70% of COVID-19 patients had elevated AST and 15.8% increased ALT on admission. |
| Hundt et al., 2020 [ | ALT, AST, GGT and total bilirubin | Original | Retrospective | 1827 | 41.6% ALT, 66.9% AST, 4.3% total bilirubin and 13.5% ALP were elevated at admission. |
Abnormal liver biochemistry tests and clinical outcome (mortality) in COVID-19 patients.
| Reference | Liver Biochemistry Test | Type of Study | Study Design | Sample Size | Main Findings/Incidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vancsa et al. 2020 [ | AST and ALT | Review (50 articles) | Systematic review and meta-analysis | - | AST (OR = 5.39) and ALT (OR = 2.49) levels were associated with a high rate of mortality. |
| Medetalibeyoglu et al., 2021 [ | AST and ALT | Original | Retrospective | 614 | AST/ALT ratio > 1 was associated with mortality risk (AUC = 0.713, |
| Li et al., 2020 [ | AST and albumin | Original | Retrospective | 80 | Decreased levels of albumin and higher levels of AST were also associated with mortality of COVID-19 patients ( |
| Bernal-Monterde et al., 2020 [ | AST and GGT | Original | Retrospective | 540 | Increased AST (40.9%) and GGT (47.3%) were not associated with survival. |
| Lei et al., 2020 [ | AST, ALT, ALP and total bilirubin | Original | Retrospective | 5771 | Significantly elevated AST and ALT, mild total bilirubin and modest ALP; elevated AST was associated with highest mortality risks. |
| Ding et al., 2020 [ | AST and total bilirubin | Original | Retrospective | 2071 | Significantly elevated AST and direct bilirubin and their levels at admission were independent risk factors of mortality. |
| Chu et al., 2020 [ | AST, ALT, ALP, GGT and total bilirubin | Original | Retrospective | 838 | Mortality of the cholestatic pattern was the highest with 28.2% of individuals followed by hepatocellular injury pattern with 25.0% and mixed pattern with 22.3%. |
| Wang et al., 2020 [ | Total bilirubin | Original | Retrospective | 657 | More COVID-19 patients who died (17%) had significantly elevated serum total bilirubin than discharged patients (4.7%). |
| Xu et al., 2021 [ | AST, ALT and total bilirubin | Original | Retrospective | 1003 | AST > 2 ULN (HR = 34.7), ALT > 2 ULN (HR = 7.0) and total bilirubin > 2 ULN were significantly related to higher mortality. |
| Ponziani et al., 2020 [ | ALP | Original | Prospective | 515 | Peak values of ALP were associated with risk of death (OR 1.007, |