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Secondary haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis in hospitalised COVID-19 patients is infrequent and does not lead to increased mortality

Secondary haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis in hospitalised COVID-19 patients is infrequent and does not lead to increased mortality
Secondary haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis in hospitalised COVID-19 patients is infrequent and does not lead to increased mortality
A significant proportion of COVID-19 patients show evidence of hyperinflammation (HI), of which secondary haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (sHLH) is the most severe manifestation and diagnosed with HScore. Using a COVID-relevant modification of the HScore (%HScore), we set out to determine the prevalence of sHLH in 567 COVID-19 inpatient cases.

The overall incidence of individuals with an 80% probability of sHLH in our COVID-19 cohort was 1.59% on admission and only rose to 4.05% if calculated at any time during admission. This small cohort as defined by %HScore showed no excess mortality compared with the whole cohort. Overall, %HScores were lower in older patients (p<0.0001) and did not reliably predict outcome at any cut-off value (AUROC 0.533, p=0.211, odds ratio 0.99).

Our study demonstrates that a modified version (%HScore) of the conventional sHLH scoring system (HScore) does not enable risk stratification in people hospitalised with COVID. We propose further work is needed to develop novel approaches to predict HI and improve trial stratification for HI directed therapy in people with COVID-19.
0007-1048
60-61
Arden-Jones, Michael
7ac43c24-94ab-4d19-ba69-afaa546bec90
Stammers, Matt
6f005a6d-3936-477d-9259-a95ddbe1ffed
Phan, Hang T.T.
a4213e91-55be-4c15-8fc1-8c4e53233c26
Borca, Florina
31fc3965-6bcf-4fd6-85bc-8b0f99f62473
Koutalopoulou, Anastasia
f3d3331a-a066-49a2-8fd2-ea8c6fcb9f4d
Teo, Ying
cdbdf2c4-0196-40fb-aea6-f6bc5ff806d0
Batchelor, James
7b6d5cb2-c5d8-46c5-bc9b-a0f5f93fea82
Smith, Trevor
010c57c8-8a0e-4686-a8af-c154ffb237f4
Duncombe, Andrew
ce7cb7e9-5aec-4801-ab3c-18b4de474fef
Arden-Jones, Michael
7ac43c24-94ab-4d19-ba69-afaa546bec90
Stammers, Matt
6f005a6d-3936-477d-9259-a95ddbe1ffed
Phan, Hang T.T.
a4213e91-55be-4c15-8fc1-8c4e53233c26
Borca, Florina
31fc3965-6bcf-4fd6-85bc-8b0f99f62473
Koutalopoulou, Anastasia
f3d3331a-a066-49a2-8fd2-ea8c6fcb9f4d
Teo, Ying
cdbdf2c4-0196-40fb-aea6-f6bc5ff806d0
Batchelor, James
7b6d5cb2-c5d8-46c5-bc9b-a0f5f93fea82
Smith, Trevor
010c57c8-8a0e-4686-a8af-c154ffb237f4
Duncombe, Andrew
ce7cb7e9-5aec-4801-ab3c-18b4de474fef

Arden-Jones, Michael, Stammers, Matt, Phan, Hang T.T., Borca, Florina, Koutalopoulou, Anastasia, Teo, Ying, Batchelor, James, Smith, Trevor and Duncombe, Andrew (2021) Secondary haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis in hospitalised COVID-19 patients is infrequent and does not lead to increased mortality. British Journal of Haematology, 193, 60-61. (doi:10.7861/clinmed.2021-0053).

Record type: Meeting abstract

Abstract

A significant proportion of COVID-19 patients show evidence of hyperinflammation (HI), of which secondary haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (sHLH) is the most severe manifestation and diagnosed with HScore. Using a COVID-relevant modification of the HScore (%HScore), we set out to determine the prevalence of sHLH in 567 COVID-19 inpatient cases.

The overall incidence of individuals with an 80% probability of sHLH in our COVID-19 cohort was 1.59% on admission and only rose to 4.05% if calculated at any time during admission. This small cohort as defined by %HScore showed no excess mortality compared with the whole cohort. Overall, %HScores were lower in older patients (p<0.0001) and did not reliably predict outcome at any cut-off value (AUROC 0.533, p=0.211, odds ratio 0.99).

Our study demonstrates that a modified version (%HScore) of the conventional sHLH scoring system (HScore) does not enable risk stratification in people hospitalised with COVID. We propose further work is needed to develop novel approaches to predict HI and improve trial stratification for HI directed therapy in people with COVID-19.

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Published date: April 2021

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Local EPrints ID: 468382
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/468382
ISSN: 0007-1048
PURE UUID: 45dad37b-3fcd-49cc-bdd1-d490eeef9e7a
ORCID for Michael Arden-Jones: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1466-2016

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Date deposited: 11 Aug 2022 17:08
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:10

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Contributors

Author: Matt Stammers
Author: Hang T.T. Phan
Author: Florina Borca
Author: Anastasia Koutalopoulou
Author: Ying Teo
Author: James Batchelor
Author: Trevor Smith
Author: Andrew Duncombe

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