2 research outputs found
The CoLab score is associated with SARS-CoV-2 viral load during admission in individuals admitted to the intensive care unit:the CoLaIC cohort study
ObjectivesThe present study examines the temporal association between the changes in SARS-CoV-2 viral load during infection and whether the CoLab-score can facilitate de-isolation.MethodsNasal swabs and blood samples were collected from ICU-admitted SARS-CoV-2 positive patients at Maastricht UMC+ from March 25, 2020 to October 1, 2021. The CoLab-score was calculated based on 10 blood parameters and age and can range from β43 to 6. Three mixed effects analyses compared patient categories based on initial PCR Ct values (low; Ctβ€20, mid; 20>Ctβ€30, high; Ct>30), serial PCR Ct values to CoLab-scores over time, and the association between within-patient delta Ct values and CoLab-scores.ResultsIn 324 patients, the median Ct was 33, and the median CoLab-score was β1.78. Mid (n=110) and low (n=41) Ct-categories had higher CoLab-scores over time (+0.60 points, 95β―% CI; 0.04β1.17, and +0.28 points, 95β―% CI β0.49 to 1.04) compared to the high Ct (n=87) category. Over time, higher serial Ct values were associated with lower serial CoLab-scores, decreasing by β0.07 points (95β―% CI; β0.11 to β0.02) per day. Increasing delta Ct values were associated with a decreasing delta CoLab-score of β0.12 (95β―% CI; β0.23; β0.01).ConclusionsThe study found an association between lower viral load on admission and reduced CoLab-score. Additionally, a decrease in viral load over time was associated with a decrease in CoLab-score. Therefore, the CoLab-score may make patient de-isolation an option based on the CoLab-score