Association Between Upper Respiratory Tract Viral Load, Comorbidities, Disease Severity, and Outcome of Patients With SARS-CoV-2 Infection

Author:

Maltezou Helena C1,Raftopoulos Vasilios2,Vorou Rengina3,Papadima Kalliopi3,Mellou Kassiani3,Spanakis Nikolaos4,Kossyvakis Athanasios5,Gioula Georgia6,Exindari Maria6,Froukala Elisavet4,Martinez-Gonzalez Beatriz5,Panayiotakopoulos Georgios7,Papa Anna6,Mentis Andreas5,Tsakris Athanasios4

Affiliation:

1. Directorate of Research, Studies, and Documentation, National Public Health Organization, Athens, Greece

2. Epidemiological Surveillance of HIV/AIDS Division, National Public Health Organization, Athens, Greece

3. Directorate for Epidemiological Surveillance and Interventions, National Public Health Organization, Athens, Greece

4. Department of Microbiology, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece

5. National Reference Laboratory for Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses, Hellenic Pasteur Institute, Athens, Greece

6. Department of Microbiology, Medical School, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece

7. Public Health Organization, Athens, Greece

Abstract

Abstract Background There is limited information on the association between upper respiratory tract (URT) viral loads, host factors, and disease severity in SARS-CoV-2–infected patients. Methods We studied 1122 patients (mean age, 46 years) diagnosed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). URT viral load, measured by PCR cycle threshold, was categorized as high, moderate, or low. Results There were 336 (29.9%) patients with comorbidities; 309 patients (27.5%) had high, 316 (28.2%) moderate, and 497 (44.3%) low viral load. In univariate analyses, compared to patients with moderate or low viral load, patients with high viral load were older, more often had comorbidities, developed Symptomatic disease (COVID-19), were intubated, and died. Patients with high viral load had longer stay in intensive care unit and longer intubation compared to patients with low viral load (P values < .05 for all comparisons). Patients with chronic cardiovascular disease, hypertension, chronic pulmonary disease, immunosuppression, obesity, and chronic neurological disease more often had high viral load (P value < .05 for all comparisons). In multivariate analysis high viral load was associated with COVID-19. Level of viral load was not associated with any other outcome. Conclusions URT viral load could be used to identify patients at higher risk for morbidity or severe outcome.

Funder

National Public Health Organization

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology and Allergy

Reference27 articles.

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