Minireviews
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2022.
World J Meta-Anal. Aug 28, 2022; 10(4): 195-205
Published online Aug 28, 2022. doi: 10.13105/wjma.v10.i4.195
Table 1 Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 viral load and disease severity in coronavirus disease 2019 patients
Ref.
Study design
No. of COVID-19 cases
Median/mean viral load (Ct or Cq) (log10 copies/mL)
Association with disease severity
Conclusion
Knudtzen et al[17], DenmarkProspective cohort169 (87 OP/82 IP)24.8 vs 28.1 (Severe vs Moderate)YesLower Cq-values were found to be indicative of more disease severity in hospitalized patients
Kawasuji et al[18], JapanRetrospective cohort56 (56 IP)5.4 vs 2.6 (Critical/Moderate-Severe)YesThe viral loads of NP swabs were correlated with disease severity and death
Maltezou et al[19], GreeceProspective cohort1122 (274 OP/848 IP)N/AYesThe viral load in the nasopharynx might be utilized to identify patients at increased risk for morbidity or poor outcome
Zheng et al[20], ChinaRetrospective cohort96 (96 IP)N/AYesThe virus persists longer with higher load and peaks later in the respiratory tissue of patients with severe disease
Aydin et al[21], TurkeyProspective cohort300 (168/79/29/24)(M/I/S/C)25.30/19.85/16.75/15.48 (M/I/S/C)YesThe Ct-values of saliva and oro-nasopharyngeal swab were useful in predicting disease severity
de la Calle et al[14], SpainRetrospective cohort455 (455 IP)N/AYesThe Ct value of RT-PCR in nasopharyngeal swabs on admission is a useful predictive marker for the development of respiratory failure
Kwon et al[22], KoreaProspective cohort31 (31 IP)35.2/27.9/26.7 (M/I/S+C)YesHigh viral load in the respiratory tract and excessive cytokines and chemokines were substantially linked with the severity of COVID-19
Piubelli et al[23], ItalyRetrospective study373 (373 OP)N/AYesThe decreasing viral load that they observed during March to May 2020 was associated with a significant reduction in severe COVID-19 cases that needed intensive care
Shlomai et al[13], IsraelRetrospective cohort170 (149 NS/21 SV)23.43 vs 29.55 (NS vs SV)YesThere was a clear relationship between nasopharyngeal viral load and hypoxemia, as well as worse clinical outcomes in hospitalized COVID-19 patients
Soria et al[24], SpainProspective cohort448 (110/236/102) (M/I/S)35.75/32.69/29.58 (M/I/S)YesThe link between viral load and disease severity was shown in COVID-19 patients
Trunfio et al[25], ItalyRetrospective cohort200 (32 NS/168 SV) N/AYesThe Ct value detected within the first week of COVID-19 onset was associated with deaths and disease severity
Tsukagoshi et al[26], JapanRetrospective study286 (138 AS/133 SM/15 FT) N/AYesThe high viral load in elderly patients at an early stage of the disease results in a bad prognosis
Wang et al[27], ChinaProspective cohort23 (11/12)(M/S)N/AYesThe viral loads in the respiratory samples were larger in the severe group than in the mild group, and they gradually decreased with time
Faíco-Filho et al[28], BrazilRetrospective cohort875 (439/266/170)(M/I/S)22/27/21.5 (M/I/S)YesThe SARS-CoV-2 virus load at admission was independently linked with death among hospitalized COVID-19 patients
Pérez-García et al[29], SpainRetrospective study255 (85/87/83) (M/I/S)N/AYesThe SARS-CoV-2 viral load was a risk factor, but CCL5 was a protective factor for ICU admission or mortality during hospitalization
Guo et al[30], ChinaProspective cohort195 (16/132/41/6) (M/I/S/C)33.74/33.59/32.10/27.53 (M/I/S/C)YesThe higher initial viral load was associated with disease severity in COVID-19 patients
Tanner et al[31], United KingdomProspective cohort185 (IP)N/AYesThe SARS-CoV-2 Ct value at admission was independently related with mortality
Berastegui-Cabrera et al[32], SpainProspective cohort72 (9 OP/63 IP)N/ANoThe viral load in the upper respiratory airways was associated with poor outcome
Karahasan Yagci et al[33], TurkeyRetrospective study730 (446 OP/284 IP)(27.8/29.4/27.9) (M/I/S)NoThe viral load was not a significant risk factor for hospitalization or fatality
Le Borgne et al[34], FranceRetrospective study287 (42 NS/245 SV)4.99 vs 4.76 (NS vs SV)NoThe viral load in the first nasopharyngeal swab was neither a predictor of severity nor of death in SARS-CoV-2 infection
Hasanoglu et al[35], TurkeyProspective cohort60 (15 AS/45 SM)N/ANoAsymptomatic individuals' viral loads were found to be substantially greater than symptomatic patients'
Bakir et al[36], TurkeyRetrospective study158 (45 OP/113 IP)26.76 vs 27.53 (OP vs IP)NoThe quantity of SARS-CoV-2 viral load did not correlate with the severity of the pulmonary lesions shown on chest CT
Ng et al[37], USARetrospective study133N/ANoThe viral loads in more seriously ill hospitalized patients were not significantly different from those in outpatient clinics