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An NMR-Based Model to Investigate the Metabolic Phenoreversion of COVID-19 Patients throughout a Longitudinal Study.

Ruben Gil-RedondoRicardo CondeMaider BizkarguenagaChiara BruzzoneAna LaínBeatriz González-ValleMilagros IriberriCarlos Ramos-AcostaEduardo AnguitaJuan Ignacio Arriaga LarizPedro Pablo España YandiolaMiguel Ángel MoranMario Ernesto Jiménez-MercadoLeire Egia-MendikuteMaría Luisa SecoHartmut SchäferClaire CannetManfred SpraulAsís PalazónNieves EmbadeShelly C LuJulien WistJeremy K NicholsonJose M MatoOscar Millet
Published in: Metabolites (2022)
After SARS-CoV-2 infection, the molecular phenoreversion of the immunological response and its associated metabolic dysregulation are required for a full recovery of the patient. This process is patient-dependent due to the manifold possibilities induced by virus severity, its phylogenic evolution and the vaccination status of the population. We have here investigated the natural history of COVID-19 disease at the molecular level, characterizing the metabolic and immunological phenoreversion over time in large cohorts of hospitalized severe patients (n = 886) and non-hospitalized recovered patients that self-reported having passed the disease (n = 513). Non-hospitalized recovered patients do not show any metabolic fingerprint associated with the disease or immune alterations. Acute patients are characterized by the metabolic and lipidomic dysregulation that accompanies the exacerbated immunological response, resulting in a slow recovery time with a maximum probability of around 62 days. As a manifestation of the heterogeneity in the metabolic phenoreversion, age and severity become factors that modulate their normalization time which, in turn, correlates with changes in the atherogenesis-associated chemokine MCP-1. Our results are consistent with a model where the slow metabolic normalization in acute patients results in enhanced atherosclerotic risk, in line with the recent observation of an elevated number of cardiovascular episodes found in post-COVID-19 cohorts.
Keyphrases
  • end stage renal disease
  • ejection fraction
  • newly diagnosed
  • chronic kidney disease
  • sars cov
  • peritoneal dialysis
  • liver failure
  • magnetic resonance
  • intensive care unit
  • patient reported outcomes
  • hepatitis b virus