COVID-19 increases extracorporeal coagulation during hemodialysis associated with upregulation of vWF/FBLN5 signaling in patients with severe/critical symptoms

Author:

Yang Guang,Shan Hui,Wu Dibin,Li Sanmu,Lai Zhiwei,Zheng Fengping,Xiong Zibo,Xiong Zuying,Diao Yuhan,Shan Ying,Chen Yun,Wang Aihong,Liang Wei,Yin Yuxin

Abstract

Abstract Background COVID-19 has been shown to increase the risk of extracorporeal coagulation during hemodialysis in patients, but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. This study aimed to investigate the effect and mechanism of COVID-19 on the risk of extracorporeal coagulation in patients with chronic kidney disease undergoing hemodialysis. Methods A retrospective analysis of the extracorporeal coagulation status of 339 hemodialysis patients at our center before and after COVID-19 infection was performed, including subgroup analyses. Post-infection blood composition was analyzed by protein spectrometry and ELISA. Results Compared to the pre-COVID-19 infection period, COVID-19-induced extracorporeal coagulation predominantly occurred in patients with severe/critical symptoms. Further proteomic analysis demonstrated that in patients with severe/critical symptoms, the coagulation cascade reaction, platelet activation, inflammation, and oxidative stress-related pathways were significantly amplified compared to those in patients with no/mild symptoms. Notably, the vWF/FBLN5 pathway, which is associated with inflammation, vascular injury, and coagulation, was significantly upregulated. Conclusions Patients with severe/critical COVID-19 symptoms are at a higher risk of extracorporeal coagulation during hemodialysis, which is associated with the upregulation of the vWF/FBLN5 signaling pathway. These findings highlight the importance of early anticoagulant therapy initiation in COVID-19 patients with severe/critical symptoms, particularly those undergoing hemodialysis. Additionally, vWF/FBLN5 upregulation may be a novel mechanism for virus-associated thrombosis/coagulation.

Funder

Science, Technology and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen Municipality

Shenzhen Clinical Research Center for Urology and Nephrology

Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province

Sanming Project of Medicine in Shenzen Municipality

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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1. Heparin;Reactions Weekly;2024-06-15

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