在检测阴性病例对照和人群病例对照设计中评估自身免疫性疾病与COVID-19之间的关系

Q1 Medicine Auto-Immunity Highlights Pub Date : 2020-10-06 DOI:10.1186/s13317-020-00141-1
Rossella Murtas, Anita Andreano, Federico Gervasi, Davide Guido, David Consolazio, Sara Tunesi, Laura Andreoni, Maria Teresa Greco, Maria Elena Gattoni, Monica Sandrini, Antonio Riussi, Antonio Giampiero Russo
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引用次数: 33

摘要

背景:COVID-19流行与所谓的“信息大流行”并行,关于COVID-19推定风险因素的无数信息已被传播。其中,出现了一种观点,即患有自身免疫性疾病(艾滋病)的人感染SARS-CoV-2的风险更高。方法:该队列包括米兰卫生保护局(AHP)的所有COVID-19病例居民,该机构从疫情爆发开始就开发了一个基于网络的平台,追踪阳性和阴性病例以及相关接触者。艾滋病受试者被定义为患有以下一种自身免疫性疾病:类风湿关节炎、系统性红斑狼疮、系统性硬化症、干燥病、强直性脊柱炎、重症肌无力、桥本病、获得性自身免疫性溶血性贫血和银屑病关节炎。为了调查aids受试者感染SARS-CoV-2的风险是否增加,以及他们一旦感染是否比无aids受试者预后更差,我们对一项检测阴性的设计病例-对照研究、一项检测阳性的病例-对照研究和一项检测阴性的病例(CC-NEG)进行了联合分析。结果:在疫情期间,米兰AHP截至2020年4月27日,共有20,364名检测阳性和34,697名检测阴性受试者。我们发现艾滋病与COVID-19阳性之间没有关联,但在CC-NEG中,艾滋病与COVID-19阴性之间存在统计学意义上的关联。如果检测阴性的受试者因呼吸道感染症状而接受检测,那么这些结果意味着自身免疫性疾病可能是一般呼吸道感染(包括COVID-19)的危险因素,但它们不是COVID-19的特定危险因素。此外,当感染SARS-CoV-2时,艾滋病患者的预后并不比非艾滋病患者差。结果强调了测试活动中潜在的不平衡,这可能与被测试者的特征有关,导致特定的虚弱人群被特别测试。结论:缺乏可靠的科学知识不可避免地导致不可靠的新闻在人群中传播,使人们无法将其理清形成可靠的信息。即使需要更多的研究来重复和加强我们的结果,这些发现也代表了基于自身免疫性疾病患者实际数据得出建议的初步证据。
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Association between autoimmune diseases and COVID-19 as assessed in both a test-negative case-control and population case-control design.

Background: COVID-19 epidemic has paralleled with the so called infodemic, where countless pieces of information have been disseminated on putative risk factors for COVID-19. Among those, emerged the notion that people suffering from autoimmune diseases (AIDs) have a higher risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Methods: The cohort included all COVID-19 cases residents in the Agency for Health Protection (AHP) of Milan that, from the beginning of the outbreak, developed a web-based platform that traced positive and negative cases as well as related contacts. AIDs subjects were defined ad having one the following autoimmune disease: rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, systemic sclerosis, Sjogren disease, ankylosing spondylitis, myasthenia gravis, Hashimoto's disease, acquired autoimmune hemolytic anemia, and psoriatic arthritis. To investigate whether AID subjects are at increased risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection, and whether they have worse prognosis than AIDs-free subjects once infected, we performed a combined analysis of a test-negative design case-control study, a case-control with test-positive as cases, and one with test-negative as cases (CC-NEG).

Results: During the outbreak, the Milan AHP endured, up to April 27th 2020, 20,364 test-positive and 34,697 test-negative subjects. We found no association between AIDs and being positive to COVID-19, but a statistically significant association between AIDs and being negative to COVID-19 in the CC-NEG. If, as likely, test-negative subjects underwent testing because of respiratory infection symptoms, these results imply that autoimmune diseases may be a risk factor for respiratory infections in general (including COVID-19), but they are not a specific risk factor for COVID-19. Furthermore, when infected by SARS-CoV-2, AIDs subjects did not have a worse prognosis compared to non-AIDs subjects. Results highlighted a potential unbalance in the testing campaign, which may be correlated to the characteristics of the tested person, leading specific frail population to be particularly tested.

Conclusions: Lack of availability of sound scientific knowledge inevitably lead unreliable news to spread over the population, preventing people to disentangle them form reliable information. Even if additional studies are needed to replicate and strengthen our results, these findings represent initial evidence to derive recommendations based on actual data for subjects with autoimmune diseases.

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