Emerging Microbes and Infections (Jan 2020)

Detectable 2019-nCoV viral RNA in blood is a strong indicator for the further clinical severity

  • Weilie Chen,
  • Yun Lan,
  • Xiaozhen Yuan,
  • Xilong Deng,
  • Yueping Li,
  • Xiaoli Cai,
  • Liya Li,
  • Ruiying He,
  • Yizhou Tan,
  • Xizi Deng,
  • Ming Gao,
  • Guofang Tang,
  • Lingzhai Zhao,
  • Jinlin Wang,
  • Qinghong Fan,
  • Chunyan Wen,
  • Yuwei Tong,
  • Yangbo Tang,
  • Fengyu Hu,
  • Feng Li,
  • Xiaoping Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2020.1732837
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 469 – 473

Abstract

Read online

ABSTRACTThe novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) infection caused pneumonia. we retrospectively analyzed the virus presence in the pharyngeal swab, blood, and the anal swab detected by real-time PCR in the clinical lab. Unexpectedly, the 2109-nCoV RNA was readily detected in the blood (6 of 57 patients) and the anal swabs (11 of 28 patients). Importantly, all of the 6 patients with detectable viral RNA in the blood cohort progressed to severe symptom stage, indicating a strong correlation of serum viral RNA with the disease severity (p-value = 0.0001). Meanwhile, 8 of the 11 patients with annal swab virus-positive was in severe clinical stage. However, the concentration of viral RNA in the anal swab (Ct value = 24 + 39) was higher than in the blood (Ct value = 34 + 39) from patient 2, suggesting that the virus might replicate in the digestive tract. Altogether, our results confirmed the presence of virus RNA in extra-pulmonary sites.

Keywords