Sanyaolu Adekunle, Okorie Chuku, Marinkovic Aleksandra, Prakash Stephanie, Balendra Vyshnavy, Lehachi Amine, Abbasi Abu Fahad, Haider Nafees, Abioye Amos, Orish Verner N, Antonio Afolabi, Badaru Olanrewaju, Pandit Rajashree, Izurieta Ricardo
Department of Biomedical Science, D'Youville University, Buffalo, NY 14201, United States.
Department of Basic Medical Science, Saint James School of Medicine, The Quarter 2640, Anguilla.
World J Virol. 2025 Jun 25;14(2):102674. doi: 10.5501/wjv.v14.i2.102674.
The novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) causes serious respiratory illness and related disorders. Vulnerable populations, including those with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, heart disease, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, obesity, and the elderly, face an increased risk of severe complications. As the pandemic evolves, various diagnostic techniques are available to detect severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (SARS-CoV-2), including clinical presentation, rapid antigen/antibody testing, molecular testing, supplemental laboratory analysis, and imaging. Based on peer-reviewed data, treatment options include convalescent plasma transfusion, corticosteroids, antivirals, and immunomodulatory medications. Convalescent plasma therapy, historically used in outbreaks like Middle East respiratory syndrome, Ebola, and SARS, is suggested by the World Health Organization for critically ill COVID-19 patients when vaccines or antiviral drugs are unavailable. Neutralizing antibodies in convalescent plasma help control viral load and improve patient outcomes, especially when administered early, though effectiveness varies. The United States Food and Drug Administration has authorized its emergency use for severe COVID-19 cases, but potential risks such as transfusion reactions and transfusion-related acute lung injury require further investigation to establish definitive efficacy. Antiviral agents like Remdesivir, an adenosine nucleotide analog, inhibit viral RNA polymerase and have shown efficacy in reducing COVID-19 severity, leading to its emergency use authorization for hospitalized patients. Other antivirals like ritonavir, lopinavir, and umifenovir disrupt viral replication and entry, but their effectiveness against SARS-CoV-2 remains under investigation. Dexamethasone, a corticosteroid, has been used in critically ill COVID-19 patients to reduce inflammation and prevent respiratory failure, as shown in the RECOVERY trial. Other immunosuppressants like ruxolitinib, baricitinib, and colchicine help modulate the immune response, reducing cytokine storms and inflammation-related complications. However, corticosteroids carry risks such as hyperglycemia, immunosuppression, and delayed viral clearance, requiring careful administration. Systematic reviews of clinical studies revealed that hydroxychloroquine with or without azithromycin did not decrease viral load nor reduce the severity of symptoms, but increased mortality among acutely hospitalized patients. There was no improvement in patients' clinical conditions after 15 days compared to standard treatment. The United States Food and Drug Administration has revoked the authorization for the use of hydroxychloroquine in COVID-19 patients due to the null benefit-risk balance. Monoclonal antibodies like itolizumab, gimsilumab, sarilumab, and tocilizumab are being studied for their ability to reduce the severe inflammatory response in COVID-19 patients, particularly cytokine release syndrome and acute respiratory distress syndrome. These antibodies target specific immune pathways to decrease pro-inflammatory cytokines, with some showing promising results in clinical trials, though their use remains under investigation. The Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats/Cas13 family of enzymes, sequenced from many COVID-19-positive patients, can potentially inhibit SARS-CoV-2 replication, cleave the RNA genome, and aid in the amplification of the genome assay. Cas13 can also target emerging pathogens an adeno-associated virus vector when delivered to the infected lungs. In addition to pharmacological agents, vaccines effectively prevent symptomatic infection, reduce hospitalizations, minimize mortality rates, and ultimately reduce the severity of the disease. This paper aims to explore the management of patients with underlying conditions who present with COVID-19 to lessen the burden on healthcare systems.
2019年新型冠状病毒病(COVID-19)会引发严重的呼吸系统疾病及相关病症。包括慢性阻塞性肺疾病、心脏病、糖尿病、慢性肾脏病、肥胖症患者以及老年人在内的易感人群,面临着出现严重并发症的更高风险。随着疫情的演变,有多种诊断技术可用于检测严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2),包括临床表现、快速抗原/抗体检测、分子检测、补充实验室分析以及影像学检查。基于经同行评审的数据,治疗方案包括恢复期血浆输注、皮质类固醇、抗病毒药物以及免疫调节药物。恢复期血浆疗法历史上曾用于中东呼吸综合征、埃博拉和严重急性呼吸综合征等疫情,世界卫生组织建议在没有疫苗或抗病毒药物的情况下,用于治疗重症COVID-19患者。恢复期血浆中的中和抗体有助于控制病毒载量并改善患者预后,尤其是早期使用时,不过其效果存在差异。美国食品药品监督管理局已批准其用于严重COVID-19病例的紧急使用,但诸如输血反应和输血相关急性肺损伤等潜在风险需要进一步研究以确定其确切疗效。像瑞德西韦这种腺苷核苷酸类似物之类的抗病毒药物可抑制病毒RNA聚合酶,并已显示出减轻COVID-19严重程度的疗效,从而使其获得了用于住院患者的紧急使用授权。其他抗病毒药物如利托那韦、洛匹那韦和乌米芬ovir可干扰病毒复制和进入,但它们对SARS-CoV-2的有效性仍在研究中。皮质类固醇地塞米松已用于重症COVID-19患者,以减轻炎症并预防呼吸衰竭,如RECOVERY试验所示。其他免疫抑制剂如鲁索替尼、巴瑞替尼和秋水仙碱有助于调节免疫反应;减少细胞因子风暴和炎症相关并发症。然而皮质类固醇存在高血糖症、免疫抑制和病毒清除延迟等风险;需要谨慎使用。对临床研究的系统评价表明,无论是否联用阿奇霉素,羟氯喹都不会降低病毒载量;也不会减轻症状严重程度;反而会增加急性住院患者的死亡率。与标准治疗相比,15天后患者的临床状况并无改善。由于利益风险平衡为零;美国食品药品监督管理局已撤销羟氯喹用于COVID-19患者的授权。诸如依妥珠单抗、吉姆西单抗、沙瑞鲁单抗和托珠单抗等单克隆抗体正在研究中,看其是否有能力减轻COVID-19患者严重炎症反应;尤其是细胞因子释放综合征和急性呼吸窘迫综合征。这些抗体靶向特定免疫途径以减少促炎细胞因子,一些在临床试验中显示出有前景的结果;不过其使用仍在研究中。从许多COVID-19阳性患者中测序得到的成簇规律间隔短回文重复序列/Cas13酶家族,可能会抑制SARS-CoV-2复制;切割RNA基因组;并有助于基因组检测的扩增。当递送至受感染的肺部时;Cas13还可以靶向新兴病原体腺相关病毒载体。除了药物制剂外;疫苗可有效预防有症状感染;减少住院率;将死亡率降至最低;并最终减轻疾病严重程度。本文旨在探讨患有基础疾病的COVID-19患者的管理方法;以减轻医疗系统的负担。