Litcius/Paper detail

Increased Serum Levels of Hepcidin and Ferritin Are Associated with Severity of COVID-19

Cuixing Zhou, Yimeng Chen, Yun Ji, Xiaozhou He, Dong Xue

2020Medical Science Monitor127 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND The aim of this study was to assess the diagnostic utility of iron homeostasis determinations for prediction of severity of COVID-19. MATERIAL AND METHODS This was a retrospective study enrolling a total of 50 patients diagnosed with the novel coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) from February 27, 2020 to March 30, 2020, including a severe group (12 patients) and a mild group (38 patients). For the control group, 50 healthy people were examined during the same period. We compared clinical laboratory data and iron homeostasis biomarkers among the 3 groups. ROC curve analysis was used to assess diagnoses. RESULTS Patients diagnosed with severe COVID-19 had higher hepcidin and serum ferritin levels than in other groups (p<0.001). A combination test of hepcidin and serum ferritin provided the best specificity and sensitivity in the prognosis of COVID-19 severity. Logistic regression analysis showed hepcidin and serum ferritin independently contributed to the severity of COVID-19. Hepcidin and serum ferritin tandem testing predicted COVID-19 severity with 94.6% specificity, while hepcidin and serum ferritin parallel testing had a sensitivity of 95.7%. CONCLUSIONS Iron homeostasis had a robust association with the occurrence of severe COVID-19. Iron homeostasis determinations were specific and sensitive for the early prediction of disease severity in COVID-19 patients and thus have clinical utility.

Topics & Concepts

HepcidinFerritinMedicineInternal medicineIron homeostasisCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)GastroenterologyHomeostasisLogistic regressionSeverity of illnessImmunologyDiseaseAnemiaInfectious disease (medical specialty)MetabolismIron Metabolism and DisordersErythropoietin and Anemia TreatmentErythrocyte Function and Pathophysiology
Increased Serum Levels of Hepcidin and Ferritin Are Associated with Severity of COVID-19 | Litcius