CGRP Plasma Levels Correlate with the Clinical Evolution and Prognosis of Hospitalized Acute COVID-19 Patients

Author:

Rizzi ManuelaORCID,Tonello Stelvio,Morani Francesca,Rizzi EleonoraORCID,Casciaro Giuseppe FrancescoORCID,Matino Erica,Costanzo Martina,Zecca ErikaORCID,Croce Alessandro,Pedrinelli Anita,Vassia Veronica,Landi Raffaella,Mallela Venkata RamanaORCID,D’Onghia DavideORCID,Minisini RosalbaORCID,Bellan MattiaORCID,Castello Luigi MarioORCID,Gavelli FrancescoORCID,Avanzi Gian CarloORCID,Patrucco Filippo,Pirisi Mario,Colangelo DonatoORCID,Sainaghi Pier PaoloORCID

Abstract

SARS-CoV-2 is the etiological agent of COVID-19, an extremely heterogenous disease that can cause severe respiratory failure and critical illness. To date, reliable biomarkers allowing for early patient stratification according to disease severity are still lacking. Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is a vasoactive neuropeptide involved in lung pathophysiology and immune modulation and is poorly investigated in the COVID-19 context. In this observational, prospective cohort study, we investigated the correlation between CGRP and clinical disease evolution in hospitalized moderate to severe COVID-19 patients. Between January and May 2021 (Italian third pandemic wave), 135 consecutive SARS-CoV-2 patients were diagnosed as being eligible for the study. Plasma CGRP level evaluation and routine laboratory tests were performed on blood samples collected at baseline and after 7 days of hospitalization. At baseline, the majority our patients had a moderate to severe clinical presentation, and higher plasma CGRP levels predicted a higher risk of in-hospital negative evolution (odds-ratio OR 2.84 [IQR 1.07–7.51]) and were correlated with pulmonary intravascular coagulopathy (OR 2.92 [IQR 1.19–7.17]). Finally, plasma CGRP levels were also correlated with plasma IP10 levels. Our data support a possible crosstalk between the lung and the neuroimmune axis, highlighting a crucial role for plasma CGRP in sustaining COVID-19-related hyperinflammation.

Funder

Italian Ministero della Salute–Ricerca Finalizzata BIAS study grant

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

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