Clinical Significance of the Correlation between Changes in the Major Intestinal Bacteria Species and COVID-19 Severity

Lingling Tang , Silan Gu , Yiwen Gong , Bo Li , Haifeng Lu , Qiang Li , Ruhong Zhang , Xiang Gao , Zhengjie Wu , Jiaying Zhang , Yuanyuan Zhang , Lanjuan Li

Engineering ›› 2020, Vol. 6 ›› Issue (10) : 1178 -1184.

PDF (899KB)
Engineering ›› 2020, Vol. 6 ›› Issue (10) : 1178 -1184. DOI: 10.1016/j.eng.2020.05.013
Research
Article

Clinical Significance of the Correlation between Changes in the Major Intestinal Bacteria Species and COVID-19 Severity

Author information +
History +
PDF (899KB)

Abstract

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a highly contagious infectious disease. Similar to H7N9 infection, pneumonia and cytokine storm are typical clinical manifestations of COVID-19. Our previous studies found that H7N9 patients had intestinal dysbiosis. However, the relationship between the gut microbiome and COVID-19 has not been determined. This study recruited a cohort of 57 patients with either general (n = 20), severe (n = 19), or critical (n = 18) disease. The objective of this study was to investigate changes in the abundance of ten predominant intestinal bacterial groups in COVID-19 patients using quantitative polymerase chain reaction (q-PCR), and to establish a correlation between these bacterial groups and clinical indicators of pneumonia in these patients. The results indicated that dysbiosis occurred in COVID-19 patients and changes in the gut microbial community were associated with disease severity and hematological parameters. The abundance of butyrate-producing bacteria, such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, Clostridium butyricum, Clostridium leptum, and Eubacterium rectale, decreased significantly, and this shift in bacterial community may help discriminate critical patients from general and severe patients. Moreover, the number of common opportunistic pathogens Enterococcus (Ec) and Enterobacteriaceae (E) increased, especially in critically ill patients with poor prognosis. The results suggest that these bacterial groups can serve as diagnostic biomarkers for COVID-19, and that the Ec/E ratio can be used to predict death in critically ill patients.

Keywords

Intestinal microbiota / COVID-19 / SARS-CoV-2

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Lingling Tang, Silan Gu, Yiwen Gong, Bo Li, Haifeng Lu, Qiang Li, Ruhong Zhang, Xiang Gao, Zhengjie Wu, Jiaying Zhang, Yuanyuan Zhang, Lanjuan Li. Clinical Significance of the Correlation between Changes in the Major Intestinal Bacteria Species and COVID-19 Severity. Engineering, 2020, 6(10): 1178-1184 DOI:10.1016/j.eng.2020.05.013

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

Funding

()

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF (899KB)

Supplementary files

Supplementary Material

1295

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/