Platelet activation and coronavirus disease 2019 mortality: Insights from coagulopathy, antiplatelet therapy and inflammation - 15/04/23

Highlights |
• | Significant platelet activation is a hallmark of severe COVID-19. |
• | Platelet activation biomarkers are associated with COVID-19 in-hospital mortality. |
• | After adjustment for confounding factors, only coagulopathy was linked to mortality. |
• | Antiplatelet agents were not a protective factor against COVID-19 mortality. |
Abstract |
Background |
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is associated with an inflammatory cytokine burst and a prothrombotic coagulopathy. Platelets may contribute to microthrombosis, and constitute a therapeutic target in COVID-19 therapy.
Aim |
To assess if platelet activation influences mortality in COVID-19.
Methods |
We explored two cohorts of patients with COVID-19. Cohort A included 208 ambulatory and hospitalized patients with varying clinical severities and non-COVID patients as controls, in whom plasma concentrations of the soluble platelet activation biomarkers CD40 ligand (sCD40L) and P-selectin (sP-sel) were quantified within the first 48hours following hospitalization. Cohort B was a multicentre cohort of 2878 patients initially admitted to a medical ward. In both cohorts, the primary outcome was in-hospital mortality.
Results |
In cohort A, median circulating concentrations of sCD40L and sP-sel were only increased in the 89 critical patients compared with non-COVID controls: sP-sel 40,059 (interquartile range 26,876–54,678)pg/mL; sCD40L 1914 (interquartile range 1410–2367)pg/mL (P<0.001 for both). A strong association existed between sP-sel concentration and in-hospital mortality (Kaplan-Meier log-rank P=0.004). However, in a Cox model considering biomarkers of immunothrombosis, sP-sel was no longer associated with mortality, in contrast to coagulopathy evaluated with D-dimer concentration (hazard ratio 4.86, 95% confidence interval 1.64–12.50). Moreover, in cohort B, a Cox model adjusted for co-morbidities suggested that prehospitalization antiplatelet agents had no significant impact on in-hospital mortality (hazard ratio 1.05, 95% CI 0.80–1.37; P=0.73).
Conclusions |
Although we observed an association between excessive biomarkers of platelet activation and in-hospital mortality, our findings rather suggest that coagulopathy is more central in driving disease progression, which may explain why prehospitalization antiplatelet drugs were not a protective factor against mortality in our multicentre cohort.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : COVID-19, Platelets, Coagulopathy, Biomarkers, Antiplatelet drugs
Abbreviations : aHR, APA, CI, COVID-19, CRP, Hs-cTnI, ICU, IQR, RT-PCR, SARS-CoV-2, sCD40L, sP-sel
Plan
| ☆ | Tweet: platelet activation in #COVID19. In 2 large cohorts of COVID-19 patients, Philippe et al. show soluble P-selectin plasma levels are not associated with mortality. Pre-hospitalization antiplatelet agents were not associated with lower mortality. @DavidMSmadja @RichardChocron @guilbon @NaderYatim @HadjadjJerome @TristanMirault @MarcSamama @TerrierBen @PlanquetteSante @SanchezOlivie11 @gendronnicolas @HopitalPompidou @UP_Medecine. |
Vol 116 - N° 4
P. 183-191 - avril 2023 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
