Biomedicines (Oct 2023)

Characterisation of Ferritin–Lymphocyte Ratio in COVID-19

  • Alexander Liu,
  • Robert Hammond,
  • Kenneth Chan,
  • Chukwugozie Chukwuenweniwe,
  • Rebecca Johnson,
  • Duaa Khair,
  • Eleanor Duck,
  • Oluwaseun Olubodun,
  • Kristian Barwick,
  • Winston Banya,
  • James Stirrup,
  • Peter D. Donnelly,
  • Juan Carlos Kaski,
  • Anthony R. M. Coates

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11102819
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 2819

Abstract

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Introduction: The ferritin–lymphocyte ratio (FLR) is a novel inflammatory biomarker for the assessment of acute COVID-19 patients. However, the prognostic value of FLR for predicting adverse clinical outcomes in COVID-19 remains unclear, which hinders its clinical translation. Methods: We characterised the prognostic value of FLR in COVID-19 patients, as compared to established inflammatory markers. Results: In 217 study patients (69 years [IQR: 55–82]; 60% males), FLR was weakly correlated with CRP (R = 0.108, p = 0.115) and white cell count (R = −0.144; p = 0.034). On ROC analysis, an FLR cut-off of 286 achieved a sensitivity of 86% and a specificity of 30% for predicting inpatient mortality (AUC 0.60, 95% CI: 0.53–0.67). The negative predictive values of FLR for ruling out mortality, non-invasive ventilation requirement and critical illness (intubation and/or ICU admission) were 86%, 85% and 93%, respectively. FLR performed similarly to CRP (AUC 0.60 vs. 0.64; p = 0.375) for predicting mortality, but worse than CRP for predicting non-fatal outcomes (all p 286 had worse inpatient survival than patients with FLR ≤ 286, p = 0.041. Conclusions: FLR has prognostic value in COVID-19 patients, and appears unrelated to other inflammatory markers such as CRP and WCC. FLR exhibits high sensitivity and negative predictive values for adverse clinical outcomes in COVID-19, and may be a good “rule-out” test. Further work is needed to improve the sensitivity of FLR and validate its role in prospective studies for guiding clinical management.

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