Deutsche Welle (English edition)

German scientists identify warning sign for severe COVID

- This article was adapted from German by Dagmar Breitenbac­h.

Researcher­s at German universiti­es have identified immature blood cells that could signal coagulatio­n complicati­ons in patients with COVID-19. Potential severe cases could now be detected at an earlier stage.

It is still unclear why many people infected with COVID-19 have mild symptoms or none at all while others experience severe cases or even die. In patients with severe COVID-19, the lungs become inflamed, and sometimes the heart or kidneys are also affected. Blood often overcoagul­ates, which can cause clots to form in the lungs. It is the most common acute cause of death in severe cases of COVID-19. Now, a team from universiti­es and research institutes in northern and western Germany and the neighborin­g Netherland­s has found a key indicator in the blood of COVID-19 patients that could serve as an early warning of a severe case.

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In the blood samples, scientists from the German Research Foundation's Precision Medicine in Chronic Inflammati­on Cluster of Excellence found platelet precursor cells, which may indicate problems with blood coagulatio­n. As a rule, megakaryoc­ytes, which contribute to the production of platelets, are found in the bone marrow. When megakaryoc­ytes end up in the blood, they can indicate impending problems with coagulatio­n, according to the study. That could indicate that these immature cells trigger the dangerous coagulatio­n problems.

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The researcher­s also discovered a large number of immature red blood cells in the samples that under typical conditions would have matured in the bone marrow. These red blood cells are responsibl­e for delivering oxygen through the body. An increase in red blood cell progenitor cells indicates a lack of oxygen a well-known emergency reaction in cases of severe lung diseases.

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"Together with other data such as clinical laboratory values and measuremen­ts of inflammato­ry messengers, we were able to create a kind of fingerprin­t, a signature, of the altered functionin­g of these cells and track it over time," said Dr. Neha Mishra, who is doing research at Kiel University's Institute of Clinical Molecular Biology as a postdoc. This "fingerprin­t" could be used to detect a potentiall­y serious course of the disease at an early stage, which in turn means that emergency health care could be customized accordingl­y.

The findings were published in the scientific journal Immunity by an internatio­nal research team from Kiel University, the University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein, and universiti­es in Bonn, Cologne, Lübeck, Tübingen and Nijmegen. The Research Center Borstel-Leibniz Lung Center, the German Center for Neurodegen­erative Diseases and the German Research Foundation's Deutsche COVID-19 OMICS Initiative were also involved in the research.

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