Cancers (Jul 2020)

Clinico-Biological Features and Clonal Hematopoiesis in Patients with Severe COVID-19

  • Nicolas Duployez,
  • Jordane Demonchy,
  • Céline Berthon,
  • Julien Goutay,
  • Morgan Caplan,
  • Anne-Sophie Moreau,
  • Anne Bignon,
  • Alice Marceau-Renaut,
  • Delphine Garrigue,
  • Imelda Raczkiewicz,
  • Sandrine Geffroy,
  • Maxime Bucci,
  • Kazali Alidjinou,
  • Julie Demaret,
  • Myriam Labalette,
  • Thierry Brousseau,
  • Annabelle Dupont,
  • Antoine Rauch,
  • Julien Poissy,
  • Sophie Susen,
  • Claude Preudhomme,
  • Bruno Quesnel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12071992
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. 1992

Abstract

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Advanced age or preexisting comorbidities have been characterized as risk factors for severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases requiring hospitalization and intensive care. In recent years, clonal hematopoiesis (CH) of indeterminate potential (CHIP) has emerged as a risk factor for chronic inflammatory background and subsequent aging-associated diseases. The purpose of this study was to identify biological factors (particularly leukocyte subtypes and inflammatory markers) associated with a risk of clinical deterioration (i.e., orotracheal intubation (OTI)) and to determine whether CH was likely to influence clinical and biological behavior in patients with severe COVID-19 requiring hospitalization. Here, we describe clinical and biological features, including the screening of CHIP mutants in a well-annotated cohort of 122 hospitalized patients with a laboratory-confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 (55% requiring OTI). We showed that elevated white blood cell counts, especially neutrophils and high C-reactive protein (CRP) levels at admission, were associated with an increased requirement of OTI. We noticed a high prevalence of CH (25%, 38%, 56%, and 82% of patients aged 80 years) compared to a retrospective cohort of patients free of hematological malignancy explored with the same pipelines (10%, 21%, 37%, and 44%). However, the existence of CH did not significantly impact clinical outcome, including OTI or death, and did not correlate with other laboratory findings.

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