Association Between ABO Blood Group System and COVID-19 Severity

Author:

Bshaena Amina M1,Almajdoub Osama H2,Alshwesh Rajaa A3,Omran Entesar A4,Haq Soghra5,Ismail Faisal567ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Research and Consultation, Libyan Medical Research Centre , Zawia , Libya

2. Department of Chemistry, Libyan Medical Research Centre , Zawia , Libya

3. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Zawia University , Zawia , Libya

4. Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, Zawia University , Zawia , Libya

5. Department of Clinical Laboratory, Faculty of Medical Technology, Tobruk University , Tobruk , Libya

6. Department of Infectious Diseases, National Centre for Disease Control , Tobruk , Libya

7. Department of Infectious Diseases, Libyan Medical Research Centre , Zawia , Libya

Abstract

Abstract Objectives A possible association between blood group systems (ABO and Rh) and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) severity has recently been investigated by various studies with conflicting results. However, due to variations in the prevalence of the ABO and Rh blood groups in different populations, their association with COVID-19 might be varied as well. Therefore, we conducted this study on Libyan participants to further investigate this association and make population-based data available to the worldwide scientific community. Methods In this case-control study, ABO and Rh blood groups in 419 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Zawia, Libya, and 271 healthy controls were compared using descriptive statistics and χ 2 tests. Results Blood group A was significantly more prevalent in patients with severe COVID-19 (64/125; 51.2%) than in patients with nonsevere COVID-19 (108/294, 36.7%) (P < .034), whereas the O blood group prevalence was higher in nonsevere COVID-19 cases (131/294, 44.5%) compared with severe cases (43/125, 34.4%) (P < .001). Conclusions The results showed a significant association between blood group A and the severity of COVID-19, whereas patients with blood group O showed a low risk of developing severe COVID-19 infection. No significant association was found between Rh and susceptibility/severity of the disease.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference19 articles.

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2. Blood group systems;Smart;ISBT Sci Series.,2020

3. Blood groups in infection and host susceptibility;Cooling;Clin Microbiol Rev.,2015

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