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©The Author(s) 2020.
World J Hepatol. Dec 27, 2020; 12(12): 1182-1197
Published online Dec 27, 2020. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v12.i12.1182
Published online Dec 27, 2020. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v12.i12.1182
Ref. | Number of patients | Pattern of liver injury | Pre-existing liver diseases | Comments | Place of study |
Richardson et al[3] | 5700 | Elevated AST: 58.4%; elevated ALT: 39% | Cirrhosis: 0.4%; chronic hepatitis B: 0.1%; chronic hepatitis C: 0.1% | Northwell Health System, New York, United States | |
Huang et al[4] | 41 | 15(31%) | 1 (2%) | Elevated AST observed in 62% of patients in ICU compared with only 25% of patients not in ICU | Wuhan, China |
Wang et al[5] | 138 | Mild elevation of AST and ALT | 4 (2.9%) | - | Wuhan, China |
Guan et al[12] | 1099 | Elevated AST: 22.2%; elevated ALT: 21.3%; elevated total bilirubin: 10.5% | 23 (2.3%) | AST elevated in 18.2% of non-severe disease but in 39.4% of severe disease; ALT elevated in 19.8% with non-severe disease and 28.1% of severe disease | 552 hospitals in 30 provinces, autonomous regions, and municipalities in mainland China |
Shi et al[16] | 81 | Transaminitis in 43 (53.1%) | 7 (8.6%) | Patients with subclinical infection had lower AST | Wuhan, China |
Fan et al[25] | 148 | Abnormal LFT in 50.7%; elevated ALT in 18.2%; elevated AST in 21.6% | Higher proportion (56.1%) with liver injury received lopinavir/ ritonavir than those without liver injury (25%) | Shanghai Public health Clinical Centre, China | |
Chen et al[35] | 99 | 43(43%); elevated AST: 35%; elevated ALT: 28%; elevated total bilirubin: 98% | One patient had severe liver injury with ALT 7590U/L | Wuhan, China | |
Cai et al[36] | 417 | During hospitalisation, rise in liver enzymes > 3 times of upper limit seen; elevated ALT: 49 (23.4%); elevated AST: 31 (14.8%); elevated total bilirubin: 24 (11.5%); elevated GGT: 51 (24.4%) | 318 (76.3%) had abnormal liver biochemistries and 90 (21.5%) had liver injury during hospitalization; 91 (21.8%) developed severe disease and 326 (78.2%) had mild disease during hospitalization; use of lopinavir/ritonavir increased the odds of liver injury by 7-fold | Shenzhen, China | |
Tabata et al[40] | 104 | Elevated AST: 17.3%; elevated ALT: 16.3% | - | - | Diamond Princess Cruise, Japan |
Huang et al[41] | 36 | Elevated ALT: 13.33%; elevated AST: 58.06%; elevated Total bilirubin: 12.90% | All fatal cases only | Wuhan, China | |
Zhang et al[42] | 82 | Liver dysfunction in 64 (78%) | 2 (2.4%) | All fatal cases only | Wuhan, China |
Yang et al[43] | 52 | 15 (29%) | No difference in incidence of liver injury between survivors and non-survivors | Wuhan, China | |
Cao et al[44] | 128 | Transaminitis present only in severe disease | Xiangyang, China | ||
Xu et al[45] | 62 | Elevated AST in only 16.1% | 7 (11.0%) | No patient had elevated ALT while a sixth had elevated AST | Zhejiang Province, China |
Cai et al[46] | 298 | 44 (14.8%) | 8 (2.7%) | Transaminitis 4 times commoner in severe disease (36.2%) compared to mild disease (9.6%) | Shenzhen, China |
Kujawski et al[47] | 12 | Elevated AST: 58.3%; elevated ALT: 58.3% | 8.3% had HBV and 8.3% had fatty liver disease | Center of Disease Control California, Illinois, Arizona, Massachusetts,Washington, Wisconsin, United States | |
Arentz et al[48] | 21 | Median AST: 273 (range 14-4432); median ALT: 108 (range 11-1414) | 4.8% had cirrhosis of liver | Kirkland, Washington, United States | |
Jin et al[49] | 651 | Liver injury seen in 13 out of 74 with GI symptoms vs 51 out of 577 without GI symptoms | Rate of increased AST, but not ALT, was significantly higher in patients with GI symptoms than in those without GI symptoms | Zhejiang Province, China | |
Qi et al[50] | 267 | Elevated AST: 7.2%; elevated ALT: 7.5%; elevated bilirubin: 2.2% | Elevated AST seen in 9 out of 217 patients with non-severe disease and 10 out of 50 patients with severe disease.Elevated ALT seen in 10 out of 217 patients with non-severe disease and 10 out of 50 patients with severe disease.Elevated bilirubin in 3 out of 217 patients with non-severe disease and 3 out of 50 patients with severe disease | Chongqing, China | |
Omrani-Nava et al[51] | 93 | Elevated AST: 29.2%; elevated ALT: 30.3%; elevated ALP: 17%; elevated total bilirubin: 10.2%; elevated direct bilirubin: 45.8% | Risk of being transferred to the intensive care unit strongly associated with the elevated levels of AST and direct bilirubin | Sari, Amol, Mazandaran Province, Iran | |
Mao et al[52] | 214 | Median AST 26 (8-8191); median ALT 26 (5-1933) | Liver enzymes were significantly higher in severe cases compared to non-severe cases | Wuhan, China | |
Xu et al[53] | 45 | Elevated AST/ALT: 37.8%; median Bilirubin: 0.91 (IQR 0.61-1.3) | |||
Tian et al[54] | 24 | Elevated AST: 8.33 %; elevated ALT: 4.17 % | 4.17 % had cirrhosis | Shandong, China | |
Chen et al[55] | 291 | Elevated AST: 15.1%; elevated ALT: 10.3%; elevated bilirubin: 9.3% | 5.2% chronic liver disease | Elevated AST in 5 out of 29 cases in mild illness, 23 out of 212 cases in moderate illness and 16 out of 50 cases in critically ill. Elevated ALT in 4 out of 29 in mild illness, 16 out of 212 cases in moderately ill and 10 out of 50 cases in critically ill. Elevated bilirubin in 4 out of 29 cases in mild illness, 17 out of 212 in moderately ill and 6 out of 50 in critically ill | Hunan Province, China |
Wang et al[56] | 18 | Elevated AST or ALT in 25% | Zhengzhou, Henan Province, China | ||
Yan et al[57] | 168 | Elevated AST: 17.3%; elevated ALT: 8.0% | Elevated AST seen in 7 out of 75 patients with non-severe disease and 11 out of 29 patients with severe disease; Elevated ALT seen in 5 out of 81patients with severe disease and 4 out of 31 patients with severe disease | Hainan, China | |
Lin et al[58] | 95 | Elevated AST: 4.2%; elevated ALT: 5.3% | Zhuhai, Guangdong Province, China | ||
Zhao et al[59] | 77 | Elevated AST: 26.0%; elevated ALT: 33.8% | Elevated AST seen in 11 out of 57 non severe patients and 9 out of 20 severe patients; Elevated ALT seen in 17 out of 57 patients with non-severe disease and 9 out of 20 patients with severe disease | Beijing, China | |
Chen et al[60] | 274 | Elevated AST: 30.7%; elevated ALT: 21.9%; median bilirubin: 0.6 (IQR 0.4-0.8) | 4 % were HbsAg positive | Wuhan, China | |
Rubin et al[61] | 54 | Elevated AST: 42.59%; elevated ALT: 40.7% | 1.8 % were HBV infected | AST: mean/SD-73.4 ± 61.8 (females); 45.1 ± 19.5 (males) ALT: mean/SD- 69.6 ± 65.2 (females); 43.9 ± 25.8 (males) | Stanford University School of Medicine, California |
Cholankeril et al[62] | 116 | Deranged LFT in 26 out of 65 cases (40%). Higher levels of AST compared to ALT. Median bilirubin- 0.4 (IQR 0.3-0.7) | 2.6% chronic liver disease | 22 of the 26 patientswith liver enzyme elevations had normal baseline liver enzymes | Stanford University HospitalsCalifornia, United States |
Yao et al[63] | 40 | Elevated AST: 40%; elevated ALT: 52.5% Elevated Bilirubin: 25% | Out of 22 critical cases, 17 had hepatic dysfunction. Out of 18 noncritical cases, 5 had hepatic dysfunction | Xi’an, Shaanxi Province, China | |
Zhao et al[64] | 75 | Elevated AST: 18.7%; elevated ALT: 20%; elevated Bilirubin: 16% | 5.3 % had chronic liver disease | Hefei, Anhui Province, China | |
Ai et al[65] | 102 | Elevated AST: 25.5%; elevated ALT: 19.6% | Xiangyang, China | ||
Ma et al[66] | 81 | Deranged AST/ALT: 38.2% | Wuhan, China | ||
Xu et al[67] | 355 | Elevated AST: 28.7%; elevated ALT: 25.6%; elevated Total bilirubin: 18.6% | Wuhan, China | ||
Shi et al[68] | 416 | Median AST: 30 (IQR 22-43); median ALT: 28 (IQR 18-46) | 1% had HBV infection | Wuhan, China | |
Luo et al[69] | 1141 | Among 183 patients, median AST: 65.8 ± 12.7, median ALT: 66.4 ± 13.2 | Wuhan, China | ||
Qi et al[70] | 21 | Elevated AST: 38.1%; elevated ALT: 23.8%; elevated GGT: 23.8% | All patients | Most common etiology of chronic liver disease was chronic hepatitis B infection | 16 designated hospitals in China |
- Citation: Anirvan P, Bharali P, Gogoi M, Thuluvath PJ, Singh SP, Satapathy SK. Liver injury in COVID-19: The hepatic aspect of the respiratory syndrome — what we know so far. World J Hepatol 2020; 12(12): 1182-1197
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-5182/full/v12/i12/1182.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4254/wjh.v12.i12.1182