PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Thromboelastometry demonstrates endogenous coagulation activation in nonsevere and severe COVID-19 patients and has applicability as a decision algorithm for intervention.

  • Rodrigo B Aires,
  • Alexandre A de S M Soares,
  • Ana Paula M Gomides,
  • André M Nicola,
  • Andréa Teixeira-Carvalho,
  • Dayde Lane M da Silva,
  • Eliana T de Gois,
  • Flávia D Xavier,
  • Francielle P Martins,
  • Gabriela P J Santos,
  • Heidi Luise Schulte,
  • Isabelle S Luz,
  • Laila S Espindola,
  • Laurence R do Amaral,
  • Liza F Felicori,
  • Luciana A Naves,
  • Maíra R M de Carvalho,
  • Matheus de S Gomes,
  • Otávio T Nóbrega,
  • Patrícia Albuquerque,
  • Wagner Fontes,
  • Ciro M Gomes,
  • Patricia S Kurizky,
  • Cleandro P Albuquerque,
  • Olindo A Martins-Filho,
  • Licia Maria H da Mota

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262600
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
p. e0262600

Abstract

Read online

In patients with severe forms of COVID-19, thromboelastometry has been reported to display a hypercoagulant pattern. However, an algorithm to differentiate severe COVID-19 patients from nonsevere patients and healthy controls based on thromboelastometry parameters has not been developed. Forty-one patients over 18 years of age with positive qRT-PCR for SARS-CoV-2 were classified according to the severity of the disease: nonsevere (NS, n = 20) or severe (S, n = 21). A healthy control (HC, n = 9) group was also examined. Blood samples from all participants were tested by extrinsic (EXTEM), intrinsic (INTEM), non-activated (NATEM) and functional assessment of fibrinogen (FIBTEM) assays of thromboelastometry. The thrombodynamic potential index (TPI) was also calculated. Severe COVID-19 patients exhibited a thromboelastometry profile with clear hypercoagulability, which was significantly different from the NS and HC groups. Nonsevere COVID-19 cases showed a trend to thrombotic pole. The NATEM test suggested that nonsevere and severe COVID-19 patients presented endogenous coagulation activation (reduced clotting time and clot formation time). TPI data were significantly different between the NS and S groups. The maximum clot firmness profile obtained by FIBTEM showed moderate/elevated accuracy to differentiate severe patients from NS and HC. A decision tree algorithm based on the FIBTEM-MCF profile was proposed to differentiate S from HC and NS. Thromboelastometric parameters are a useful tool to differentiate the coagulation profile of nonsevere and severe COVID-19 patients for therapeutic intervention purposes.