| Literature DB >> 35364749 |
Jörn Bullerdiek1,2, Emil Reisinger3, Birgit Rommel4, Andreas Dotzauer5.
Abstract
There is no doubt that genetic factors of the host play a role in susceptibility to infectious diseases. An association between ABO blood groups and SARS-CoV-2 infection as well as the severity of COVID-19 has been suggested relatively early during the pandemic and gained enormously high public interest. It was postulated that blood group A predisposes to a higher risk of infection as well as to a much higher risk of severe respiratory disease and that people with blood group O are less frequently and less severely affected by the disease. However, as to the severity of COVID-19, a thorough summary of the existing literature does not support these assumptions in general. Accordingly, at this time, there is no reason to suppose that knowledge of a patient's ABO phenotype should directly influence therapeutical decisions in any way. On the other hand, there are many data available supporting an association between the ABO blood groups and the risk of contracting SARS-CoV-2. To explain this association, several interactions between the virus and the host cell membrane have been proposed which will be discussed here.Entities:
Keywords: ABO blood groups; COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2 infection; Severity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35364749 PMCID: PMC8973646 DOI: 10.1007/s00709-022-01754-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protoplasma ISSN: 0033-183X Impact factor: 3.186
For the sake of transparency, in case of preprints preceding a peer-reviewed paper in some cases, both have been included in this table even if a complete overlap of data was noticed. In case of more than one version of a preprint, the different versions have been included as separate entries if and when the number of cases or controls or their description, respectively, had been changed. Though in some cases, associations of Rh-blood groups and either the risk of infection or the risk of severe disease have been mentioned; this is only additional information in some cases and far from being representative. Of note, two main questionnaire-based studies have not been included (Shelton et al., 2020; El-Shitany et al., 2021). CoV + tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 (if not mentioned otherwise by qRT-PCR), CoV − tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 (if not mentioned otherwise by qRT-PCR), CRRT continuous renal replacement therapy, CS clinical/serological study, ECMO extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, GWAS genome-wide association study, ICU intensive care unit
| Reference | Type of study/country | Cases/patients and controls | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Youha et al., | CS Kuwait | 3305 patients. Control: 3,730,027 anonymized individuals representing almost Kuwait’s entire population; data obtained from a national database | No association between severe COVID-19 and ABO blood group in a unique, unselected population but increased risk of pneumonia in group A, lower prevalence of blood group O in individuals infected with SARSCoV-2, and a higher prevalence of B and AB. No association between SARS-CoV-2 infection rates with blood group A or RhD group |
| Badedi et al., | CS Saudi Arabia | 323 Saudi adults with COVID-19 of whom 108 died, 215 recovered | No significant association between blood group and mortality risk |
| Barnkob et al., | CS Denmark | Of 473,654 individuals tested, 7422 were CoV + , and 466,232 were CoV − . Of the CoV + individuals, 1951 were hospitalized and 5471 non-hospitalized and 550 deceased and 6872 alive | ABO type not a risk factor for hospitalization or death; blood group O associated with decreased risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection |
| Bhandari et al., | CS USA | A total of 825 cases (admitted with confirmed COVID-19 infection by RT-PCR) and 396 controls (seen at the same institution during the calendar year of 2019) were included | No significant relationship of ABO blood groups with susceptibility and mortality |
| COVID-19 host genetics initiative, release 5, January 18, 2021 (see also Niemi et al., | GWAS | Several analyses with a total of 49,562 COVID-19 patients including a comparison of hospitalized COVID vs. not hospitalized COVID patients, total cases 5,773, total controls 15,497 | Significant association of |
| Ellinghaus et al., | GWAS Italy and Spain | 1980 patients with severe COVID-19 (all receiving oxygen) vs. 2381 controls including 998 randomly selected blood donors with no evidence of COVID-19 who were genotyped for the purpose of the study as well as 1383 individuals from previous GWAS studies before the Corona pandemic using the same genotyping array) | Compared to the controls, patients with blood group A were overrepresented whereas those with blood group O turned out to be underrepresented. Design of the study not allowing for a conclusion if blood group A may be associated with either a higher risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection or a higher risk for a severe disease |
| Gamal et al., | CS Italy | 1601 SARS-CoV-positive persons with known ABO blood group compared to 27,715 first time blood donors | Blood group A significantly overrepresented among SARS-CoV-2 positive patients. No significant association between blood groups O, B, and AB and the susceptibility to acquire SARS-CoV-2 infection |
| Göker et al., | CS Turkey | 186 CoV + patients (with PCR confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19) as well as 1881 healthy control individuals (blood donors) were included | No significant effect of ABO blood groups on the clinical outcome; blood group A increased susceptibility to infection and blood group O decreased susceptibility as compared to type A |
| Gómez et al., | CS Spain | 566 hospitalized patients (mean age 64.57 years, range 24–95; 65% male), 236 admitted to ICU, control: 300 healthy individuals of the same age range | A-group was a significant risk factor for developing a severe form of COVID-19 with ICU admission. Compared with healthy population controls, patients with COVID-19 requiring hospitalization showed no significantly different ABO-genotype frequencies |
| Hoiland et al., | CS Canada | 95 critically ill COVID-19 patients with ABO blood group data available included in the analyses | Critically ill COVID-19 patients with blood group A or AB: increased risk for requiring mechanical ventilation, CRRT, and prolonged ICU admission compared to patients with blood group O or B |
| Hultström et al., | CS Sweden | 64 CoV + patients from a critical care cohort compared to the blood type distribution in the population as a whole | Blood type A or AB associated with increased risk of requiring critical care or dying; the design of the study does not allow for a conclusion if blood group A may be associated with either a higher risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection or a higher risk for a severe disease |
| Kotila et al., | CS Nigeria | 302 patients including 297 with known blood group, 179 symptomatic, control: blood donor population | Blood group O is protective against COVID-19 infection while blood groups B and AB are risk factors; patients with anti-B (blood groups O and A) in their serum were less likely to be infected by the virus; patients with anti-A (blood groups O and B) were more likely to become symptomatic from the infection. No susceptibility of group A to the infection was found |
| Latz et al., | CS USA | Of 1289 CoV + patients, 484 (37.5%) were admitted to hospital, 123 (9.5%) were admitted to the ICU, 108 (8.4%) were intubated, 3 (0.2%) required ECMO, and 89 (6.9%) died | Blood type not associated with risk of progression to severe disease requiring intubation or causing death, nor with higher peak levels of inflammatory markers |
| Leaf et al., | CS USA | 2033 critically ill patients with COVID-19 included. The expected distribution of ABO phenotype in each of the above race/ethnicity categories was estimated using data from 3.1 million blood donors in the USA | Among white patients, the observed distribution of ABO phenotypes differed from its expected distribution; this difference was primarily driven by patients with blood type A and 0; among black and Hispanic patients, the observed and expected distributions of ABO phenotypes were similar; the mortality rate was similar across ABO phenotypes in all race/ethnicity categories |
| Levi et al., | CS Brazil | 6457 CoV + individuals by either RT-PCR or antibody test compared to unaffected patients | ABO blood group without significant impact on the risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection |
| Li et al., | CS China | 265 hospitalized patients, 3694 controls | People with blood group A had a significantly higher risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection, whereas blood group O had a significantly lower risk. In dead patients, no differences between blood types |
| Majeed et al., | CS Iraq | 5668 COVID-19 patients (all PCR-positive) along with the same number of control samples | No evidence for association of blood types, including RhD, with death due to COVID-19 when adjustments were made for age, gender, and risk factors (see Fig. |
| Mendy et al., | CS USA | 428 COVID-19 patients including 192 patients (44.9%) were hospitalized and 101 (23.6%) had a severe form of the disease | ABO blood group was neither associated with hospitalization nor with disease severity |
| Muñiz-Diaz et al., | CS Spain | 965 COVID-19 patients were severely affected and transfused during their hospitalization | Individuals with blood group A have a higher risk of death than those with group O (OR 1.39, 95% CI: 1.03–1.86) or than those with non-A blood groups |
| Nauffal et al., | CS USA | 409 individuals who had ABO blood group data available were examined for frequency, management, and outcomes of arterial and venous thromboembolic complications | Blood group A to be associated with higher odds of major cardiovascular events but no association between blood group and all-cause mortality |
| Niemi et al., | GWAS Meta-analysis with data across 19 countries | Significant association of ABO locus with infection but no significant association of ABO locus with disease severity when comparing hospitalized COVID-19 vs. not hospitalized patients (B1_ALL_leave_23andme) | |
| Niles et al., | CS USA | 276,536 females with matched SARS-CoV‐2 and ABO‐Rh results, 34,178 being tested positive, for 88,975 race/ethnicity provided | Rh positivity, independent of ABO blood group and race/ethnicity, was a risk factor for SARS‐CoV‐2 positivity. Blood type O is slightly protective against SARS‐CoV‐2 positivity. Once race/ethnicity has been considered; association between ABO/Rh and SARS‐CoV‐2 positivity was confirmed but greatly attenuated after factoring in race/ethnicity |
| Pairo-Castineira et al., | GWAS UK | 2244 critically-ill COVID-19 patients from 208 UK ICUs, ancestry-matched controls from the UK Biobank population study and results were confirmed in GWAS comparisons with two other population control groups: the 100,000 genomes project and Generation Scotland | The ABO locus was not genome-wide significant. A signal close to genome-wide significance at this locus in the combined meta-analysis suggests that this variant may be associated with susceptibility to COVID-19, but not critical illness |
| Pairo-Castineira et al., | See Pairo-Castineira et al., | See Pairo-Castineira et al., | See Pairo-Castineira et al., |
| Ray et al., 2020 | CS Canada | 7071 CoV + individuals including 1328 with severe COVID-19 or death. For comparison, the total group of 225,556 CoV + or CoV − patients was included | O and Rh − blood groups with a slightly lower risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection; when restricted to 7071 persons who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, no association between blood group and the risk for severe illness or death; in contrast, when analyzing all 225,556 CoV + or CoV − patients, type O blood versus others was protective against SARS-CoV-2 positivity with or without severe illness or death |
| Roberts et al., 2020 | GWAS USA | COVID-19 survey responses between April and May 2020 with accompanying genetic data from the AncestryDNA customer database. Susceptibility GWAS with 2417 cases (COVID-19 positive) and 14,993 controls (COVID negative). Susceptibility GWAS with 250 cases (COVID-19 positive reporting hospitalization) and 1967 controls (COVID-19 positive reporting no hospitalization) | Associations with severe COVID-19 near ABO locus ( |
| Sardu et al., | CS Italy | Compared O vs | Non-O COVID-19 hypertensive patients have significantly higher values of pro-thrombotic indexes, as well as higher rate of cardiac injury and deaths compared to O patients; ABO blood type influences worse prognosis in hypertensive patients with COVID-19 infection |
| Severe Covid- | GWAS | 1980 patients with severe COVID-19 (all receiving oxygen) vs. 2381 controls (including 998 randomly selected blood donors who were genotyped for the purpose of the study. A total of 40 of these participants had evidence of the development of anti–SARS-CoV-2 antibodies, all of whom had mild or no COVID-19 symptoms as well as 1383 individuals from previous GWAS studies before the Corona pandemic) | Compared to the controls, patients with blood group A were overrepresented in the group of patients whereas those with blood group O turned out to be underrepresented. Design of the study not allowing for a conclusion if blood group A may be associated with either a higher risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection or a higher risk for a severe disease |
| Solmaz and Araç, 2020 | CS Turkey | 1667 COVID-19 patients compared to general population | Blood group O could be associated with decreased risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection; blood group A with increased risk for infection; blood group does not affect the course of the disease and is not associated with mortality |
| Tonon et al., | CS France | 172 patients admitted to ICU | ABO blood group type may not be related to the severity of SARS-CoV-2 infection or related death |
| Yaylaci et al., | CS Turkey | 397 patients treated due to COVID-19 infection | Most frequent blood type was A + ; Rh + blood group in all cases admitted to ICU and with death outcome: The Rh + blood group was found in a significantly high number of patients who were admitted to ICU; no relationship between mortality and Rh blood group. None of the comparative analyses of O, A, B, and AB groups with other blood groups revealed a significant relationship with ICU admission and mortality |
| Zalba Marcos et al., | CS Spain | 226 patients with (PCR-positive) COVID-19 admitted to the hospital, including 17.9% who were admitted to the ICU and 16.3% who died. Population ABO blood groups from donors as controls | Both respiratory complications and deaths without significant differences between blood groups; blood group associated with thrombotic complications and admission to the ICU: blood group B developed more thrombosis and required more admission to the ICU, with group O being the least admitted to ICU |
| Zhang et al., | CS UK | Information on ABO blood group was available for 1713 patients who tested positive for COVID-19. Of these, 227 of 682 with blood type O and 365 of 1031 with other blood types were hospitalized | Similar percentage of positive tests among ABO blood groups. Participants with blood group O less likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 after a positive test (33.3% versus 38.0%) |
| Zhao et al., | CS China | 2173 patients with COVID-19, 206 dead, control: 27,080 (population of the respective areas) | Blood group A associated with a higher risk for acquiring COVID-19; blood group O associated with a lower risk for infection; blood group A was associated with a higher risk of death compared with non-A groups |
| Zietz and Tatonetti, | CS USA | 682 CoV + individuals including 179 who were intubated and 80 who had died. Compared to 877 CoV-negative individuals | Blood group A associated with increased odds for infection; blood group O associated with decreased odds for infection; few individuals with AB blood groups were included (21 COV + , 47 COV −); no association between blood group and intubation or death |
| Zietz and Tatonetti, | Study evaluating associations between blood groups and outcomes using four pairs of populations: COV + vs. COV − , COV + vs. general population (excluding those tested for SARS-CoV-2), COV + /intubated vs. COV + /not intubated, and COV + /deceased vs. COV + /alive | Significant associations between SARS-CoV-2 test results and both Rh ( | |
| Zietz et al., | Analyzed 14,112 individuals tested for SARS-CoV-2 with known blood type in the New York Presbyterian (NYP) hospital system including 2394 COV + individuals; associations between ABO and Rh blood types and infection, intubation, and death were evaluated; data are highly enriched for severely ill patients | Slightly increased infection prevalence among non-O blood types; risk of intubation decreased among A and increased among AB and B types, compared to type O; risk of death increased for type AB and decreased for types A and B. Self-assessment of the study: “blood type appears to have a consistent effect, though the magnitudes of these effects on risk of intubation or death are modest, and estimates have large uncertainties relative to their magnitudes; the relatively large estimated errors in our analysis also suggest modest effect sizes and that greater sample sizes or meta-analyses are needed to estimate these effects more precisely.” | |
| Zietz et al., | CS USA | See Zietz et al., | See Zietz et al., |
Fig. 1Scheme illustrating main types of association studies and their interpretation, as well as their limits. The size of the columns is only to illustrate the different groups and does not represent real percentage
taken from the different studies. However, similar distinctions, e.g., underly the different evaluations as carried out by the COVID-19 host genetics initiative (COVID-19 host genetics initiative, 2021)
Fig. 2Flow diagram (Sankey plot) from Majeed et al. (2021) illustrating the distribution of mild, moderate, and severe COVID-19 among the ABO blood groups as represented by different colors in a large study from Iraq. The width of the lines corresponds to the percentage of the different subgroups. Available under a Creative Commons Attribution License
Fig. 3Schematic illustration of possible mechanisms that are discussed to explain a higher risk of blood type A individuals or a relative protection of O-type individuals to contract SARS-CoV-2. a Canonical interaction of viral spike protein with ACE2, b ABH glycans either associated with ACE2 or with the virus particle facilitating the interaction between viral spike protein and ACE2, c ABH glycans on the membrane of the target cell acting as non-canonical receptors, d anti-A antibodies blocking the interaction between ABH glycans attached to the viral surface and ACE2, and e anti-A antibodies binding to ABH glycans attached to the viral spike protein blocking virus-host cell contact thus reducing the risk of viral entry