Biomedicines (May 2023)

The Role of NETosis and Complement Activation in COVID-19-Associated Coagulopathies

  • Emily Parissa Ghanbari,
  • Kai Jakobs,
  • Marianna Puccini,
  • Leander Reinshagen,
  • Julian Friebel,
  • Arash Haghikia,
  • Nicolle Kränkel,
  • Ulf Landmesser,
  • Ursula Rauch-Kröhnert

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11051371
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 1371

Abstract

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Inflammation-induced coagulopathy is a common complication associated with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We aim to evaluate the association of NETosis and complement markers with each other as well as their association with thrombogenicity and disease severity in COVID-19. The study included hospitalized patients with an acute respiratory infection: patients with SARS-CoV2 infection (COVpos, n = 47) or either pneumonia or infection-triggered acute exacerbated COPD (COVneg, n = 36). Our results show that NETosis, coagulation, and platelets, as well as complement markers, were significantly increased in COVpos patients, especially in severely ill COVpos patients. NETosis marker MPO/DNA complexes correlated with coagulation, platelet, and complement markers only in COVpos. Severely ill COVpos patients showed an association between complement C3 and SOFA (R = 0.48; p ≤ 0.028), C5 and SOFA (R = 0.46; p ≤ 0.038), and C5b-9 and SOFA (R = 0.44; p ≤ 0.046). This study provides further evidence that NETosis and the complement system are key players in COVID-19 inflammation and clinical severity. Unlike previous studies that found NETosis and complement markers to be elevated in COVID-19 patients compared to healthy controls, our findings show that this characteristic distinguishes COVID-19 from other pulmonary infectious diseases. Based on our results, we propose that COVID-19 patients at high risk for immunothrombosis could be identified via elevated complement markers such as C5.

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