Metabolomics study of COVID-19 patients in four different clinical stages
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2022
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SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2) is the coronavirus strain causing the
respiratory pandemic COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019). To understand the pathobiology of SARSCoV-
2 in humans it is necessary to unravel the metabolic changes that are produced in the individuals
once the infection has taken place. The goal of this work is to provide new information about the
altered biomolecule profile and with that the altered biological pathways of patients in different
clinical situations due to SARS-CoV-2 infection. This is done via metabolomics using HPLC–QTOF–MS
analysis of plasma samples at COVID-diagnose from a total of 145 adult patients, divided into different
clinical stages based on their subsequent clinical outcome (25 negative controls (non-COVID); 28
positive patients with asymptomatic disease not requiring hospitalization; 27 positive patients with
mild disease defined by a total time in hospital lower than 10 days; 36 positive patients with severe
disease defined by a total time in hospital over 20 days and/or admission at the ICU; and 29 positive
patients with fatal outcome or deceased). Moreover, follow up samples between 2 and 3 months
after hospital discharge were also obtained from the hospitalized patients with mild prognosis. The
final goal of this work is to provide biomarkers that can help to better understand how the COVID-19
illness evolves and to predict how a patient could progress based on the metabolites profile of plasma
obtained at an early stage of the infection. In the present work, several metabolites were found as
potential biomarkers to distinguish between the end-stage and the early-stage (or non-COVID) disease
groups. These metabolites are mainly involved in the metabolism of carnitines, ketone bodies, fatty
acids, lysophosphatidylcholines/phosphatidylcholines, tryptophan, bile acids and purines, but also
omeprazole. In addition, the levels of several of these metabolites decreased to “normal” values at
hospital discharge, suggesting some of them as early prognosis biomarkers in COVID-19 at diagnose.
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