Association of RT-qPCR Ct Values and Disease Severity among COVID-19 Patients Visiting a Tertiary Care Hospital in Nepal

Author:

Joshi JagadishORCID,Joshi Om Prakash,Kamar Sher Bahadur,Awasthi Guna Raj,Shah YogendraORCID,Shahi Ramesh,Khadka Sandip,Joshi Hem Raj,Padhaya Pushpa Raj,Joshi Chet Raj,Ojha Ram Prashad,Singh Sunil Bahadur,Bhatt Lok Raj,Dhami Ram Singh,Pandey KishorORCID,Regmi SudipORCID,Sapkota Sita Ram,Pant Dhan Kumar,Khadka Kamal Singh,Dumre Shyam PrakashORCID,Pandey Basu Dev

Abstract

COVID-19 pandemic due to SARS-CoV-2 has been one of the major global health issues of this aeon. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association of SARS-CoV-2 cycle threshold (Ct) values with multiple factors among COVID-19 patients visiting a tertiary care hospital in Sudurpashchim province of Nepal. A retrospective analysis was performed on the data of randomly selected COVID-19 cases among the total RT-qPCR tested patients from March 2020 to April 2022. The Ct values at the time of patient admission and their clinical outcomes (discharge or death) were compared. Among the COVID-19 patients, survivor group had significantly higher initial Ct value compared to non-survivors [median Ct values 23.21 and 24.39 (P < 0.0001)]. Selected haematological parameters; white blood cells (P<001), neutrophils (P<001), and monocytes (P<0.0001), and all the biochemical parameters were significantly different between these two groups (p < 0.005). Furthermore, significantly increased CRP (61.54±63.00, P<0.0017), D-dimer levels (0.8979± 1.480, P<0.0001), creatinine (0.7931±0.2551, P<0.0001), monocytes (0.6782±0.7981, P<0.0001), and random blood sugar (152.4±34.32, P<0.0001) were observed among non-survivors indicating as cause of disease severity in COVID-19. The findings of this study imply that the Ct value, CRP and D-dimer levels could be a crucial marker for the early detection of severe COVID-19 patients or those at higher risk of developing severe disease. This will eventually help to identify cases requiring immediate and critical medical care and reduce mortality.

Publisher

Journal of Pure and Applied Microbiology

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