Evaluation of Disease Severity in Relation to Blood Groups in Egyptian Patients with COVID-19 | ||||
International Journal of Medical Arts | ||||
Article 9, Volume 4, Issue 4, April 2022, Page 2313-2318 PDF (2.19 MB) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/ijma.2022.109545.1405 | ||||
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Authors | ||||
Ali Abdelaziz Abdelkader Elghanam ![]() | ||||
1Department of Chest Diseases, Damietta Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Egypt | ||||
2Department of Clinical Pathology, Damietta Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Egypt | ||||
3Department of Chest Disease, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Egypt | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Background: As a new emerging pandemic, COVID-19 is a challenge facing the world. Researches are active to discover factors related to disease severity, as an effort to decrease its impact on health status and mortality. Aim of the work: The current research aimed at exploring if a relationship is present between ABO blood grouping and disease severity and associated mortality associated with COVID-19. Patients and Methods: This cross-sectional trial was completed at Al-Azhar University Hospital [New Damietta] between January 2021 to June 2021. It included 100 patients with suspicious clinical manifestations of COVID-19, confirmed by positive reverse transcription real-time polymerase chain reaction (rt RT-PCR) test of swabs obtained from their respiratory tract. All patients were subjected to full medical history taking, thorough clinical assessment, laboratory examinations, chest radiography and high-resolution computerized tomography on chest. Results: The commonest blood group among the study population was group A in (53%), followed by group O in (19%), then group B in (18%) and group AB in (10%). Individuals with blood group A are significantly susceptible to catch COVID-19 infection (p-value= 0.01), whereas those with blood group O are significantly unsusceptible to be infected (p-value= 0.035). Hypertension was frequent among patients with groups A and B compared with groups AB and O (52.8%, 50.0% versus 20% and 5.2% respectively). There was a significant association between group AB and disease severity (p-value= 0.002), while group A was significantly linked to critical disease and mortality (p-value= 0.032). The vast majority of group O patients (84.2%) had mild disease, whilst mortality was confined to the blood group A. Conclusion: There is an association between ABO blood groups and either COVID-19 susceptibility, severity and mortality. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
COVID-19; Severity; Blood group; Mortality | ||||
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