AI Article Synopsis

  • Reliable biomarkers for early risk prediction of adverse outcomes in COVID-19 are currently unavailable.
  • The study evaluated the potential of Gas6 and its receptors (sAxl and sMerTK) as early indicators for patient outcomes, involving 139 COVID-19 patients during Italy's third pandemic wave.
  • Results indicated that high Gas6 levels at hospital admission were linked to worse clinical conditions, while lower sMerTK levels were associated with better outcomes, suggesting that Gas6 could be a valuable prognostic marker for COVID-19 severity.

Article Abstract

Reliable biomarkers allowing early patients' stratification for the risk of adverse outcomes in COVID-19 are lacking. Gas6, together with its tyrosine kinase receptors named TAM, is involved in the regulation of immune homeostasis, fibrosis, and thrombosis. Our aim was to evaluate whether Gas6, sAxl, and sMerTK could represent early predictors of disease evolution either towards a negative (death or need of ICU admission) or a positive (discharge and/or clinical resolution within the first 14 days of hospitalization) outcome. To this purpose, between January and May 2021 (corresponding to third pandemic wave in Italy), 139 consecutive SARS-CoV-2 positive patients were enrolled in a prospective observational study. Plasma levels of these molecules were measured by ELISA at the time of hospitalization and after 7 and 14 days. We observed that higher plasma Gas6 concentrations at hospital admission were associated with a worsening in clinical conditions while lower sMerTK concentrations at baseline and after 7 days of hospitalization were associated with a more favorable outcome. At multivariate analysis, after correction for demographic and COVID-19 severity variables (NEWS2 and PiO/FiO), only Gas6 measured at baseline predicted an adverse prognosis with an odds ratio of 1.03 (C.I. 1.01-10.5). At ROC curve analysis, baseline Gas6 levels higher than 58.0 ng/ml predicted a severe disease evolution with 53.3% sensitivity and 77.6% specificity (area under the curve 0.653, = 0.01, likelihood ratio of 2.38, IQR: 1.46-3.87). Taken together, these results support the hypothesis that a dysregulation in the Gas6/TAM axis could play a relevant role in modulating the course of COVID-19 and suggest that plasma Gas6 may represent a promising prognostic laboratory parameter for this condition.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9070408PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/1568352DOI Listing

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