The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Virus may cause lingering gut infection, scientists say

Infectious COVID-19 in stool of patients may also play role in spread.

- By Jason Gale

COVID-19 patients have active and prolonged gut viral infection, even in the absence of gastrointe­stinal symptoms, scientists found.

The coronaviru­s may continue to infect and replicate in the digestive tract after clearing in the airways, researcher­s at the Chinese University of Hong Kong said in a statement Monday. The findings, published in the medical journal GUT, have implicatio­ns for identifyin­g and treating cases, they said.

SARS-CoV-2 spreads mainly through respirator­y droplets — spatters of virus-laden discharge from the mouth and nose, according to the World Health Organizati­on. Since the first weeks of the pandemic, however, scientists have said infectious virus in the stool of patients may also play a role in transmissi­on.

A February study of 73 patients hospitaliz­ed with the coronaviru­s in China’s Guangdong province found more than half tested positive for the virus in their stool.

“We used to think of SARS-CoV-2 as just a pulmonary or respirator­y disease,” said Siew Chien Ng, assistant dean of medicine and associate director of the university’s Centre for Gut Microbiota Research, in an interview Tuesday. “But over the last couple months, a lot of evidence has emerged that SARS-CoV-2 also affects the intestinal tract.”

Ng and colleagues scientists studied stool samples from 15 patients to better understand the virus’s activity in the gastrointe­stinal tract. They found active gut infection in seven of them, some of whom had no nausea, diarrhea or other digestive symptoms. Patients’ stool continued to test positive about a week after their respirator­y samples were negative, Ng said. One patient was still positive after 30 days, she said.

Ng and colleagues plan to conduct further tests to demonstrat­e virus particles from stool are capable of causing disease after finding surrogate biomarkers that indicate they are infectious.

It’s not yet known how SARSCoV-2 makes its way to the gastrointe­stinal tract to cause an infection there, according to Ng. It’s possible some infectious particles survive the stomach’s acidic environmen­t.

Treatments that modulate the gut microbiome should be explored, Ng said. The gut bacteria of patients with a gastrointe­stinal coronaviru­s infection showed a loss of protective microbes and a proliferat­ion of disease-causing ones. The effects were worsened in the COVID-19 cases treated with antibiotic­s, she said.

The Chinese University has offered free screening stool tests to travelers arriving at the airport since late March, and identified six infected children among more than 2,000 samples tested. From Monday, up to 2,000 COVID-19 tests will be done daily as part of targeted detection of asymptomat­ic people.

More than one patient tested positive even though their respirator­y samples were negative, said Francis K.L. Chan, the university’s dean of medicine and director of the Centre for Gut Microbiota Research.

“Stool test is accurate and safe, making it suitable and more effective for COVID-19 screening for specific groups of people,” Chan said in the statement. Some regulators including the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion have reached out about stool tests.

 ?? NYT ?? It’s not yet known how SARS-CoV-2 makes its way to the gastrointe­stinal tract to cause an infection there, scientists say.
NYT It’s not yet known how SARS-CoV-2 makes its way to the gastrointe­stinal tract to cause an infection there, scientists say.

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