Abstract
Background
An association of ABO blood group and COVID-19 remains controversial.
Methods
Following STROBE guidance for observational research, we explored the distribution of ABO blood group in patients hospitalized for acute COVID-19 and in those with Long COVID. Contingency tables were made and risk factors were explored using crude and adjusted Mantle-Haentzel odds ratios (OR and 95% CI).
Results
Up to September 2022, there were a total of 5,832 acute COVID-19 hospitalizations in our hospital, corresponding to 5,503 individual patients, of whom blood group determination was available for 1,513 (27.5%). Their distribution by ABO was: 653 (43.2%) group 0, 690 (45.6%) A, 113 (7.5%) B, and 57 (3.8%) AB, which corresponds to the expected frequencies in the general population. In parallel, of 676 patients with Long COVID, blood group determination was available for 135 (20.0%). Their distribution was: 60 (44.4%) from group 0, 61 (45.2%) A, 9 (6.7%) B, and 5 (3.7%) AB. The distribution of the ABO system of Long COVID patients did not show significant differences with respect to that of the total group (p ≥ 0.843). In a multivariate analysis adjusting for age, sex, ethnicity, and severity of acute COVID-19 infection, subgroups A, AB, and B were not significantly associated with developing Long COVID with an OR of 1.015 [0.669–1.541], 1.327 [0.490–3.594] and 0.965 [0.453–2.058], respectively. The effect of the Rh+ factor was also not significant 1,423 [0.772–2,622] regarding Long COVID.
Conclusions
No association of any ABO blood subgroup with COVID-19 or developing Long COVID was identified.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference42 articles.
1. New SARS-like virus in China triggers alarm;J Cohen;Science,2020
2. Aiming for the end of the COVID-19 pandemic: the what, how, who, where, and when;JB Soriano;Chin Med J,2023
3. WHO Coronavirus (COVID-19) Dashboard. https://covid19.who.int [accessed on 20 December 2022].
4. High-dimensional characterization of post-acute sequelae of COVID-19;Z Al-Aly;Nature,2021
5. Long covid: One in seven children may still have symptoms 15 weeks after infection, data show;J. Wise;BMJ,2021
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献