| Literature DB >> 36001241 |
Syandrez Prima Putra1, Taufik Hidayat2, Rahma Tsania Zhuhra3.
Abstract
The persistence and infectivity of SARS-CoV-2 in different postmortem COVID-19 specimens remain unclear despite numerous published studies. This information is essential to improve corpses management related to clinical biosafety and viral transmission in medical staff and the public community. We aim to understand SARS-CoV-2 persistence and infectivity in COVID-19 corpses. We conducted a systematic review according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) protocols. A systematic literature search was performed in PubMed, Science Direct Scopus, and Google Scholar databases using specific keywords. We critically reviewed the collected studies and selected the articles that met the criteria. We included 33 scientific papers that involved 491 COVID-19 corpses. The persistence rate and maximum postmortem interval (PMI) range of the SARS-CoV-2 findings were reported in the lungs (138/155, 89.0%; 4 months), followed by the vitreous humor (7/37, 18.9%; 3 months), nasopharynx/oropharynx (156/248, 62.9%; 41 days), abdominal organs (67/110, 60.9%; 17 days), skin (14/24, 58.3%; 17 days), brain (14/31, 45.2%; 17 days), bone marrow (2/2, 100%; 12 days), heart (31/69, 44.9%; 6 days), muscle tissues (9/83, 10.8%; 6 days), trachea (9/20, 45.0%; 5 days), and perioral tissues (21/24, 87.5%; 3.5 days). SARS-CoV-2 infectivity rates in viral culture studies were detected in the lungs (9/15, 60%), trachea (2/4, 50%), oropharynx (1/4, 25%), and perioral (1/4, 25%) at a maximum PMI range of 17 days. The SARS-CoV-2 persists in the human body months after death and should be infectious for weeks. This data should be helpful for postmortem COVID-19 management and viral transmission preventive strategy.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Infectivity; Persistence; Postmortem; SARS-CoV-2
Year: 2022 PMID: 36001241 PMCID: PMC9399587 DOI: 10.1007/s12024-022-00518-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Forensic Sci Med Pathol ISSN: 1547-769X Impact factor: 2.456
Fig. 1Postmortem SARS-CoV-2 persistence and infectivity search strategy using PRISMA flowchart
Demography of references included in the systematic review
| Aschman et al. [ | Germany | 43 | 31 males, 11 females | n/a | 72 | n/a |
| Beltempo et al. [ | Italy | 1 | 1 male | 60 | n/a | n/a |
| Berezowska et al. [ | Switzerland | 12 | 7 males, 5 females | n/a | 73 | 35–96 |
| Bogdanovic et al. [ | Serbia | 1 | 1 male | 56 | n/a | n/a |
| Bonelli et al. [ | Italy | 1 | 1 male | 41 | n/a | n/a |
| Casagrande et al. [ | Germany | 11 | 5 males, 6 females | 68.5 | n/a | n/a |
| Dell'Aquila et al. [ | Italy | 12 | 4 males, 8 females | 82.3 | n/a | 54–93 |
| Diao et al. [ | China | 6 | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Dorward et al. [ | UK | 11 | 10 male, 1 female | 76.8 | n/a | n/a |
| Ducloyer et al. [ | France | 1 | 1 male | 75 | n/a | n/a |
| Fuest et al. [ | Germany | 23 | 16 males, 7 females | 72 | n/a | n/a |
| Grassi et al. [ | Italy | 29 | n/a | 69 | n/a | n/a |
| Heinrich et al. [ | Germany | 11 | 8 males, 3 females | n/a | n/a | 52–90 |
| Jurek et al. [ | Poland | 2 | 1 male, 1 female | 90 | n/a | 89–91 |
| Kurabi et al. [ | USA | 6 | 3 males, 3 females | n/a | 65 | 44–91 |
| List et al. [ | Austria | 16 | 10 males, 6 females | n/a | 79 | 53–93 |
| Zito Marino et al. [ | Italy | 27 | 15 males, 12 females | 66.7 | n/a | n/a |
| Matschke et al. [ | Germany | 27 | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Matsumoto et al. [ | Japan | 12 | 7 males, 5 females | 71 | n/a | n/a |
| Musso et al. [ | Italy | 16 | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Mwananyanda et al. [ | Zambia | 58 | 48 males, 10 females | n/a | 48 | n/a |
| Nagasawa et al. [ | Japan | 5 | 3 males, 2 females | 70 | n/a | 58–78 |
| Penkava et al. [ | Germany | 20 | 14 males, 6 females | n/a | 69 | 44–95 |
| Plenzig et al. [ | Germany | 2 | 2 females | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Plenzig et al. (2) [ | Germany | 4 | 3 males, 1 female | 81 | n/a | 65–88 |
| Remmelink et al. [ | Belgium | 17 | 12 males, 5 females | n/a | 72 | 62–77 |
| Sablone et al. [ | Italy | 5 | 4 males, 1 female | 63.8 | n/a | 44–84 |
| Schröder et al. [ | Germany | 33 | n/a | 79 | n/a | 55–99 |
| Sekulic et al. [ | USA | 2 | 2 males | n/a | n/a | 54–81 |
| Servadei et al. [ | Italy | 27 | 15 males, 12 females | 76.2 | n/a | n/a |
| Wong et al. [ | Germany | 8 | 5 males, 3 females | 68 | n/a | n/a |
| Yang et al. [ | China | 12 | n/a | 65 | n/a | 42–87 |
| Zacharias et al. [ | Austria | 30 | 14 males, 16 females | n/a | 79 | 65–93 |
n/a, data not available
SARS-CoV-2 persistence findings in postmortem studies
| Aschman et al. [ | Lung tissue | n/a | 45 h | < 6 days | RT-qPCR | 38/43 (88%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA in the heart (10/42), quadriceps (7/41), and deltoid (2/42) tissues |
| Beltempo et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal swab | n/a | n/a | 35 days | RT-qPCR | 1/1 (100%) | |
| Berezowska et al. [ | FFPE tissue of lung | 27 h | 14 h | 6.5–70 h | RT-qPCR | 12/12 (100%) | IHC detected viral spike protein in lung tissue (6/12). ISH detected viral mRNA in lung tissue (3/5) |
| Bogdanovic et al. [ | Vitreous humor | n/a | n/a | 3 months | RT-qPCR | 1/1 (100%) | |
| Bonelli et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | n/a | n/a | 41 days | RT-qPCR | 1/1 (100%) | |
| Casagrande et al. [ | Corneal disc | 2.7 days | n/a | n/a | RT-qPCR | 6/11 (67%) | |
| Dell'Aquila et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | 43.92 h | n/a | 12–120 h | RT-qPCR | 7/12 (58%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA in tracheal swab (3/12) and lung swab (5/12) |
| Diao et al. [ | Kidney tissue | n/a | n/a | 0–24 h | ISH | 6/6 (100%) | IHC detected viral nucleocapsid and spike protein (6/6) |
| Dorward et al. [ | Lung tissue | n/a | 19.3 h | n/a | RT-qPCR | 11/11 (100%) | |
| Ducloyer et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | n/a | n/a | 48 h | RT-qPCR | 1/1 (100%) | |
| Fuest et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | 34.5 h | n/a | n/a | RT-qPCR | 4/23 (17%) | 12/23 deceased patients tested negative in the last RT-qPCR test |
| Grassi et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | 4.7 days | n/a | n/a | RT-qPCR | 13/29 (45%) | |
| Heinrich et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | n/a | 5.7 h | 2.9–32 h | RT-qPCR | 11/11 (100%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA after death within 0 h (9/11), 12 h (10/11), 24 h (10/11), 36 h (11/11), 60 h (11/11), 72 h (11/11), 96 h (11/11) and 168 h (11/11) |
| Jurek et al. [ | Bone marrow | n/a | n/a | 12 days | RT-qPCR | 2/2 (100%) | |
| Kurabi et al. [ | Middle ear | n/a | n/a | 3 h | RT-qPCR | 3/6 (50%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA in nasal septal mucosa (3/6) |
| List et al. [ | Aqueous humor and vitreous humor | n/a | 21.5 h | 4–53 h | RT-qPCR | 0/16 (0%) | |
| Zito Marino et al. [ | FFPE tissue of lung | n/a | n/a | 3–5 days | RT-qPCR | 27/27 (100%) | ISH detected viral RNA in lung FFPE tissue (12/27) |
| Matschke et al. [ | FFPE tissue from the frontal lobe | 3.3 days | n/a | n/a | RT-qPCR | 13/27 (48%) | IHC detected viral spike (14/40) and nucleocapsid (8/40) proteins in the brain |
| Matsumoto et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | 67.67 h | n/a | < 240 h | RT-qPCR | 7/7 (100%) | |
| Musso et al. [ | Lung tissue | n/a | n/a | 24–78 days | RT-qPCR | 12/16 (75%) | |
| Mwananyanda et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | n/a | n/a | < 48 h | RT-qPCR | 58/58 (100%) | |
| Nagasawa et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | n/a | n/a | 2–11 days | RT-qPCR | 5/5 (100%) | |
| Penkava et al. [ | Conjunctival swabs | n/a | n/a | 19–78 h | RT-qPCR | 10/20 (50%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA in vitreous swab (6/20) |
| Plenzig et al. [ | Lung tissue | n/a | n/a | 4 months | RT-qPCR | 2/2 (100%) | |
| Plenzig et al. (2) [ | Lung tissue | n/a | n/a | 1–17 days | RT-qPCR | 4/4(100%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA from the kidney (1/2), small intestine (1/4), and brain (1/4) tissue |
| Remmelink et al. [ | Lung tissue | n/a | n/a | < 5 days | RT-qPCR | 16/17 (94%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA in the heart (14/17), liver (14/17), bowel (14/17), spleen (11/17), and kidney (10/17). IHC detected viral protein in the lung (11/17) |
| Sablone et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | n/a | n/a | 22–27 days | RT-qPCR | 5/5 (100%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA in respiratory tract swabs and multiorgan biopsies (5/5) |
| Schröder et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | 3.5 days | n/a | 0–17 days | RT-qPCR | 24/33 (72%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA in perioral swabs (21/24), body bag (6/24), hands (14/24), wrists (14/24), shoulder & hips (13/24) |
| Sekulic et al. [ | FFPE tissue of lung | n/a | n/a | 29–39 h | RT-qPCR | 2/2 (100%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA in FFPE tissue of the lymph node (2/2), bronchus, spleen, and heart (1/2) |
| Servadei et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | n/a | n/a | 2 h | RT-qPCR | 19/27 (70%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA after death within 12 h (16/27) and 24 h (18/27) |
| Wong et al. [ | FFPE tissue of the lung | n/a | 35.5 h | 20–48 h | RT-qPCR | 8/8 (100%) | RT-qPCR detected viral RNA in FFPE tissue of the salivary gland and tonsil (7/8), trachea (6/8), thyroid (6/8), heart (6/8), stomach (3/8), kidney, liver, spleen, and adrenal gland (2/8) |
| Yang et al. [ | Testes | n/a | n/a | 1 h | RT-qPCR | 1/12 (8.3%) | |
| Zacharias et al. [ | Nasopharyngeal swab | n/a | 23 h | 8–124 h | RT-qPCR | 11/11 (100%) |
n/a data not available
SARS-CoV-2 infectivity findings in postmortem studies
| Zacharias et al. [ | Lung tissue | n/a | 25 h | 14–68 h | Viral culture | 7/11 (64%) | |
| Plenzig et al. (2) [ | Lung tissue | n/a | n/a | 1–17 days | Viral culture | 2/4 (50%) | Positive culture in trachea (2/4), perioral (1/4), and oropharynx (1/4) |
| Plenzig et al. [ | Lung tissue | n/a | n/a | 4 months | Viral culture | 0/2 (0%) | |
| Schröder et al. [ | Perioral swab | n/a | n/a | 0–5 days | Viral culture | 0/11 (0%) | No positive culture in the hands (0/5), wrist (0/6), shoulder and hips (0/6), and body bag (0/2) |
n/a data not available