Pulmonary Circulation (Nov 2020)

Circulating markers of angiogenesis and endotheliopathy in COVID-19

  • Alexander B. Pine,
  • Matthew L. Meizlish,
  • George Goshua,
  • C-Hong Chang,
  • Hanming Zhang,
  • Jason Bishai,
  • Parveen Bahel,
  • Amisha Patel,
  • Rana Gbyli,
  • Jennifer M. Kwan,
  • Christine H. Won,
  • Christina Price,
  • Charles S. Dela Cruz,
  • Stephanie Halene,
  • David van Dijk,
  • John Hwa,
  • Alfred I. Lee,
  • Hyung J. Chun

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2045894020966547
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

Increase in thrombotic and microvascular complications is emerging to be a key feature of patients with critical illness associated with COVID-19 infection. While endotheliopathy is thought to be a key factor of COVID-19-associated coagulopathy, markers indicative of this process that are prognostic of disease severity have not been well-established in this patient population. Using plasma profiling of patients with COVID-19, we identified circulating markers that segregated with disease severity: markers of angiogenesis (VEGF-A, PDGF-AA and PDGF-AB/BB) were elevated in hospitalized patients with non-critical COVID-19 infection, while markers of endothelial injury (angiopoietin-2, FLT-3L, PAI-1) were elevated in patients with critical COVID-19 infection. In survival analysis, elevated markers of endothelial injury (angiopoietin-2, follistatin, PAI-1) were strongly predictive of in-hospital mortality. Our findings demonstrate that non-critical and critical phases of COVID-19 disease may be driven by distinct mechanisms involving key aspects of endothelial cell function, and identify drivers of COVID-19 pathogenesis and potential targets for future therapies.