Litcius/Paper detail

COVID-19 biomarkers and their overlap with comorbidities in a disease biomarker data model

Nikhita Gogate, Daniel Lyman, Amanda Bell, Edmund Cauley, Keith A. Crandall, Ashia Joseph, Robel Kahsay, Darren A. Natale, Lynn M. Schriml, Sabyasach Sen, Raja Mazumder

2021Briefings in Bioinformatics24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In response to the COVID-19 outbreak, scientists and medical researchers are capturing a wide range of host responses, symptoms and lingering postrecovery problems within the human population. These variable clinical manifestations suggest differences in influential factors, such as innate and adaptive host immunity, existing or underlying health conditions, comorbidities, genetics and other factors-compounding the complexity of COVID-19 pathobiology and potential biomarkers associated with the disease, as they become available. The heterogeneous data pose challenges for efficient extrapolation of information into clinical applications. We have curated 145 COVID-19 biomarkers by developing a novel cross-cutting disease biomarker data model that allows integration and evaluation of biomarkers in patients with comorbidities. Most biomarkers are related to the immune (SAA, TNF-∝ and IP-10) or coagulation (D-dimer, antithrombin and VWF) cascades, suggesting complex vascular pathobiology of the disease. Furthermore, we observe commonality with established cancer biomarkers (ACE2, IL-6, IL-4 and IL-2) as well as biomarkers for metabolic syndrome and diabetes (CRP, NLR and LDL). We explore these trends as we put forth a COVID-19 biomarker resource (https://data.oncomx.org/covid19) that will help researchers and diagnosticians alike.

Topics & Concepts

BiomarkerDiseaseBiomarker discoveryPopulationMedicineCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Computational biologyBioinformaticsImmunologyBiologyInternal medicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)ProteomicsGeneticsEnvironmental healthGeneCOVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchLong-Term Effects of COVID-19