AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists are trying to find out if having Clonal Hematopoiesis (a condition with blood cell mutations) makes COVID-19 worse for patients.
  • They studied 24 patients in the ICU and found many mutations, but these mutations were similar to those in healthy people.
  • The researchers think that while COVID-19 might change blood cell composition, more studies with larger groups of patients are needed to understand the long-term effects of these mutations.

Article Abstract

Whether Clonal Hematopoiesis (CH) represents a risk factor for severity of the COVID-19 disease remains a controversial issue. We report the first high- sensitivity analysis of CH in COVID-19 patients (threshold of detection at 0.5% vs 1 or 2% in previous studies). We analyzed 24 patients admitted to ICU for COVID-19 (COV-ICU) and 19 controls, including healthy subjects and asymptomatic SARS-CoV2-positive individuals. Despite the significantly higher numbers of CH mutations identified (80% mutations with <2% variant allele frequency, VAF), we did not find significant differences between COV-ICU patients and controls in the prevalence of CH or in the numbers, VAF or functional categories of the mutated genes, suggesting that CH is not overrepresented in patients with COVID-19. However, when considering potential drivers CH mutations (CH-PD), COV-ICU patients showed higher clonal complexity, in terms of both mutation numbers and VAF, and enrichment of variants reported in myeloid neoplasms. However, we did not score an impact of increased CH-PD on patient survival or clinical parameters associated with inflammation. These data suggest that COVID-19 influence the clonal composition of the peripheral blood and call for further investigations addressing the potential long-term clinical impact of CH on people experiencing severe COVID-19. We acknowledge that it will indispensable to perform further studies on larger patient cohorts in order to validate and generalize our conclusions. Moreover, we performed CH analysis at a single time point. It will be necessary to consider longitudinal approaches with long periods of follow-up in order to assess if the COVID-19 disease could have an impact on the evolution of CH and long-term consequences in patients that experienced severe COVID-19.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10781164PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0282546PLOS

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