Predicting the clinical course and allocating limited medical resources appropriately is crucial during the COVID-19 pandemic. Platelets are involved in microthrombosis, a critical pathogenesis of COVID-19; however, the role of soluble CLEC-2 (sCLEC-2), a novel platelet activation marker, in predicting the prognosis of COVID-19 remains unexplored. We enrolled 108 patients with COVID-19, hospitalized between January 2021 and May 2022, to evaluate the clinical use of sCLEC-2 as a predictive marker. sCLEC-2 levels were measured in plasma sampled on admission, as well as interleukin-6, cell-free DNA, von Willebrand factor, and thrombomodulin. We retrospectively classified the patients into two groups - those who required oxygenation during hospitalization (oxygenated group) and those who did not (unoxygenated group) - and compared their clinical and laboratory characteristics. The correlation between sCLEC-2 and the other parameters was validated. The sCLEC-2 level was significantly higher in the oxygenated group (188.8 pg/mL vs. 296.1 pg/mL). Multivariate analysis identified high sCLEC-2 levels (odds ratio per 10 pg/mL:1.25) as an independent predictor of oxygen therapy requirement. sCLEC-2 was positively correlated with cell-free DNA, supporting the association between platelet activation and neutrophil extracellular traps. In conclusion, sCLEC-2 is a clinically valuable marker in predicting oxygen therapy requirements for patients with COVID-19.
Keywords: CLEC-2; COVID-19; extracellular traps; platelet; thrombosis.
What is the context? During the COVID-19 epidemic with tremendous damage to healthcare systems worldwide, predicting the clinical course of patients and allocating limited medical resources appropriately is crucial.Platelets are involved in microthrombosis - a critical pathogenesis of COVID-19. The role of soluble CLEC-2 (sCLEC-2), a novel in vivo platelet activation marker, in predicting the prognosis of COVID-19 remains unexplored.What is new? sCLEC-2 is an independent predictive marker of oxygen therapy requirement in COVID-19.What is the impact? In most cases, patients requiring oxygen therapy must be hospitalized. The ability to predict such cases during the COVID-19 epidemic, when medical recourses are depleted, may contribute to the appropriate allocation of medical resources.