The present invention relates to a method for assessing the severity of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), in particular SARS-CoV-2 (Covid-19). Such a method may be used in a healthcare unit for sorting patients to decide the treatment priority.
As defined in the present document, patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 refers to patients that have been positively tested with any method identifying the presence of SARS-CoV-2.
“PSP/reg” refers to human pancreatic stone protein, also called regenerating gene (REG) I protein or lithostatine or pancreatic thread protein (Gross et al., J. Clin. Invest. 1985, 76:21 15-2126) and can be the isoform alpha (Uniprot sequence number: P05451, also identified herewith as SEQ ID NO:1) or beta (Uniprot sequence number: P48304, also identified herewith as SEQ ID NO:2).
The rapid and global spread of the SARS-CoV-2 and the associated Covid-19 pandemic poses multiple challenges to public health systems. This is particularly true for intensive care units (ICU) where the rapidly increasing number of patients requiring invasive respiratory support places a severe burden on ICU healthcare professionals, infrastructures, material and treatments needs. The impressive amount of data published over the past few months has shed light on the clinical characteristics of Covid-19 patients, including risk factors for severe disease and death. Various studies of Covid-19 ICU patients have shown differences in mortality rates, but have consistently reported high numbers (F. Zhou, and al., The Lancet 2020), ranging from 61-97%. Patients infected by SARS-CoV-2 that are generally defined as “at risk” (older age and/or patients with comorbidities such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease, hypertension, and cancer (R. E. Jordan, et al., BMJ 2020)) have a higher likelihood of experiencing complications of Covid-19, mostly severe pneumonia, septic shock and multiple organ dysfunction. In a recent study, 11% of Covid-19 patients who developed acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) worsened over a short period of time and later died of multiple organ failure (N. Chen, et al., The Lancet 2020, 10223:507-513).
Sepsis is currently defined as “a life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection” (Sepsis-3) (M. Singer, and al., JAMA 2016, 315:801-810). Clinically, organ dysfunction is defined as sequential organ failure assessment (SOFA) score of two points or more. A subset of septic patients progresses to septic shock. These septic shock patients are clinically defined as having persistent hypotension requiring vasopressors to maintain a mean arterial pressure of >65 mm Hg and with a serum lactate level greater than 2 mmol/L (18 mg/dL) despite adequate volume resuscitation. From these definitions it is apparent that all SARS-CoV-2 infected patients who required invasive mechanical ventilation due to lung failure shall be defined as “septic”, because of the SOFA respiratory points≥2.
In this context, it is important to identify early onset identifiers of Covid-19 complications such as septic shock and multiple organ dysfunction. The SOFA score, apart from being cumbersome to measure due to the multiple parameters comprising it and the need of a central laboratory to collect all data, is not predictive of organ dysfunction but rather an expression of the extent of organ dysfunction at a given time. Therefore, there is a need for early alert signal(s) of organ dysfunction and septic shock to provide clinicians with timely data for patient management to mitigate the impact of these dysfunctions and promptly reset homeostasis. Septic shock and multiorgan dysfunction are major complications in critically ill Covid-19 patients admitted to intensive care units (ICU) and are associated with high mortality rate. Biomarkers that are predictive of these conditions are therefore essential for early diagnosis in order to best adapt the patient management strategy.
Nowadays the diagnosis can only be done by the combination of multiple clinical signs, the complex sequential organ failure assessment score (SOFA score) and the controversial Sepsis-3 definition (S. Sinha et al., J Anaesthesiol Clin Pharmacol. 2018, 34:4:542-543), and not by a simple blood test. Other biomarkers, Procalcitonin PCT and C-reactive protein CRP, have extensively been studied, but today none of them have shown the capacity to detect sepsis quickly enough and with a high enough diagnostic accuracy (C. Rhee, et al., Critical care 2016, 6:20:89).
Pancreatic stone protein/regenerating protein (PSP/reg) belongs to a family of lectin-binding proteins that allows a much earlier diagnosis of sepsis, septic shock and organ dysfunction than all other current solutions proposed in the international guidelines (C. S. Singer, et al. JAMA 2016, 315:8:801-810) of medical societies.
A literature review (P. Eggimann, et al., Biomarkers 2019, 13:02:135-145), summarizing 13 PSP/reg studies, was published in 2019 and a promising study (H. J. Klein, et al. Ann Surg. 2020) was published in January 2020 by the Burn center of the University Hospital of Zurich.
Theses numerous publications show that the PSP/reg assay is more specific and sensitive than other biomarker for the early diagnosis of sepsis, septic shock and multiorgan failure in ICU adults (M. Llewlyn, et al., Crit. Care 2013, 17:2:R60), children (Z. Jiri, et. al., Cytokine 2014, 66:2:106-111), newborn (A. Rass, et al., BioMed. Res. Int 2016, 1-8) and burn (H. J. Klein, et al., World Journal of Surgery 2020, 44:3000-3009) patients. PSP/reg allows the identification of sepsis in post-cardiac surgery patients (H. Klein, et al., PLoS ONE 2015, 10:3:e0120276), PSP/reg predicts outcome in patients with peritonitis in ICU (R. Gukasjan, et al., Crit. Care Med 2013, 41:4:1027-1036), PSP/reg is a biomarker of organ failure in Ventilator-Associated-Pneumonia VAP (L. Boeck, et al., Chest 2011, 140:4:925-932) and a biomarker predicting mortality in adults (Y.-A. Que, et al., Crit. Care 2012, 16:4: R114) and in children (Q. Wu, et al., Med. Sci. Monit 2017, 23:1533-1539).
The values of PSP/reg were determined in the healthy subject in 2015 (E. Schlapbach, et al., BMC Anesthesiol 2015, 15:168). PSP/reg detect early infection and sepsis in traumatized patients (M. Keel, et al., Crit. Care Med 2009, 37:5:1642-1648), in emergency department (L. Garcia de Guardinia-Romualdo, et al., Eur. J. Clin. Invest 2017, 47:4:297-304), in pediatric acute osteomyelitis (C. Cui, et al., Med. Sci. Monit 2017, 23:5211-5217), and in cancer patients with febrile neutropenia (L. Garcia de Guadiana-Romualdo, et al., Clin Chem Lab Med 2019, 57:4:540-548).
The pathophysiological mechanism of PSP/reg is not yet clearly defined (R. Graf, Pancreatology 2020, 20:3:301-304), but studies in rats suggest that that serum PSP/reg in septic patients is predominantly derived through an acute phase response of the pancreas (T. Reding, et al., Oncotarget 2017, 8:30162-30174). In humans, PSP/REG activates granulocyte neutrophils (M. Keel, et al., Crit. Care Med 2009, 37:51642-1648), which seems to confirm that the PSP/reg might serve as an acute phase protein.
The association between changes in biomarker concentrations in the development of sepsis (bacterial and viral), septic shock and multiorgan dysfunction was assessed in this invention to identify a new diagnostic strategy for early identification of complications in Covid-19 patients.
Currently, it is very difficult to identify clinical deteriorations of hospitalized SARS patients, in particular Covid-19 patients, as most of them have sepsis due to the viral infection, and to the respiratory distress. Moreover, the cytokine storm is creating a complex clinical picture making it difficult for the practitioners to assess the severity of the clinical situation.
A fortiori, there is presently no score to help the clinicians to sort and/or orient patients for better treatment.
There is therefore a strong need for solutions to speed up and improve the assessment of the severity of SARS.
The inventors have discovered that the severity assessment of SARS, especially SARS-CoV-2, may be facilitated and its quality improved with the use of a severity score that is composed of at least:
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the method comprises the following steps:
The severity score may also advantageously include another biomarker score, such as a C-Reactive Protein (CRP).
The severity score is indicative of the development of clinical complications and/or deteriorations including multiple organ failures, bacterial sepsis and severe viral sepsis.
The PSP/reg score correlates with the sequential organ failure assessment score (SOFA score).
The invention allows triage, sorting, orientation, positioning and/or stratification of patients according the severity level.
The invention is explained in a more precise way in the present chapter, with the support of the following figures:
RESPSCORE+PSPSCORE=cSOFA (Covid-19 sequential organ failure assessment)
As defined in those illustrated examples that refer to SARS-CoV-2, the severity score is called Covid-19 sequential organ failure assessment (cSOFA) and is composed of the sum of the respiratory score (RESPSCORE) and the PSP score (PSPSCORE). The RESPSCORE is identical to the respiratory dysfunction component of the SOFA score. It may be established by the practitioner's appreciation as shown in
Body fluids useful for determination of PSP/reg levels are e.g. whole blood, serum, plasma, urine, sputum, cerebrospinal fluid, tear fluid, saliva, sweat, milk, or extracts from solid tissue or from fecal matter.
Any known method may be used for the determination of the level of PSP/reg in body fluids. Methods considered are e.g. ELISA, RIA, EIA, mass spectrometry, or microarray analysis and any fluidic assay methods.
The obtained cSOFA score from 0 to 10 correlates well to the well-established SOFA score from 0 to 10 for Covid-19 patients as shown in
As described in
Based on the described classification of the cSOFA score (see
The invention is not limited to the assessment of SARS-CoV-2 but may also be advantageously used with patients infected by any type of SARS.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2020/060314 | 11/3/2020 | WO |