Coagulation dysfunction seems to be an important issue in patients with COVID-19. Recently, some researchers analyzed the clinical and laboratory findings of COVID-19 and found that severe patients often had prolonged PT, increased D-dimer levels, low fibrinogen, and DIC [6, 7]. Inflammatory storms are a feature of severe COVID-19. Compared with moderate patients, severe patients more frequently had dyspnea and lymphopenia, with markedly higher levels of IL-2R, IL-6, IL-10, and TNF-α [8]. The severe inflammatory state secondary to COVID-19 leads to severe derangement of hemostasis and prominent alternation of coagulation parameters [4, 9,10,11]. It is generally believed that deterioration of coagulation parameters during the disease course is closely associated with COVID-19 worsening and death.
As one of the most important parameters, PT is widely used to assess coagulation function in the clinic. Many studies have explored the change in PT in patients with COVID-19 [7,8,9, 12,13,14,15]. Chen et al. [8] showed that the PT was not significantly different between severe cases and moderate cases with COVID-19. Han et al. [5] also reported that there was no significant difference in PT between patients with different levels of severity of COVID-19 and healthy controls. However, more studies reported that severe patients had significantly prolonged PT compared with non-severe patients [16,17,18]. In addition, two studies on COVID-19 indicated that non-survivors had higher PT levels than survivors [6, 12]. We also found that admission PT was significantly higher in non-survivors than in survivors, while the admission PT values of most patients (70/85, 82.35%) were in the normal range (9 to 13 s) in the present study.
It is worth noting that variability in thromboplastin reagents may lead to large interlaboratory differences in PT results. The INR is widely used in the clinic and is able to make the results of different laboratories comparable by standardizing different reagents: INR = (PTtest/PTnormal)ISI, where PTtest refers to the PT value of patient, PTnormal refers to the PT value of normal control health, and ISI indicates the International Sensitivity Index of the thromboplastin reagent used. In the present study, we found that the INR values were significantly higher in non-survivors than in survivors; however, 97.65% of INR values at admission were within the normal range (0.76–1.24).
PT-act also provides a common international scale for PT reporting as a supplement. The calculation formula of PT-act is as follows: PT-act = [PTnormal − (PTnormal × 0.6)]/[PTtest − (PTnormal × 0.6)] × 100%. PT-act has the similar clinical significance as PT and can accurately reflect the activity of coagulation factors II, V, VII, and X. The decrease in coagulation factor synthesis, DIC, and hyperfibrinolysis could significantly prolong PT and decrease PT-act. In this study, PT-act was significantly lower in non-survivors than in survivors. We also show that the incidence of PT-act < 75% at admission was markedly high (91.67%) in non-survivors, while it was 21.92% in survivors, and the percentage of abnormal PT and INR values in non-survivors was 50% and 16.67%, respectively. Therefore, we argue that PT-act may better reflect the severity of patients than PT and the INR.
At present, there is only one study involving PT-act in patients with COVID-19 [5]. Han et al. [5] reported that PT-act was lower in SARS-CoV-2 patients compared to healthy controls and that PT-act decreased with increasing severity of the disease; however, this study did not explore the effect of PT-act on the outcome of patients with COVID-19. The researchers did not focus on the PT-act, which may be because the PT-act was not a conventional indicator of coagulation function in the clinic, and some hospitals did not carry out PT-act testing.
Many studies on COVID-19 have focused on the D-dimer level. COVID-19 patients with D-dimer levels ≥ 2.0 μg/mL had a higher incidence of mortality than those with D-dimer levels < 2.0 μg/mL, and the authors argued that D-dimer could be an early and helpful marker to improve the management of COVID-19 patients [19]. Another study showed that 16 patients with COVID-19 ARDS had elevated D-dimer levels (5.5 μg/mL, interquartile range 2.5–6.5) [20]. A meta-analysis showed that approximately 37.2% of patients with COVID-19 had an elevated D-dimer level [21]. The significant elevation of D-dimer in severe novel coronavirus pneumonia (NCP) patients was a good index for identifying groups at high risk of venous thromboembolism [13]. Tang et al. [6] found that markedly elevated D-dimer and FDP levels are common in deaths due to NCP. Tang et al. [14] used heparin to treat patients and reported that the 28-day mortality of heparin users was lower than that of non-users in patients with D-dimer levels > 6-fold of the upper limit of normal (32.8% vs. 52.4%, P = 0.017). Our study showed that the levels of D-dimer in 58.82% (50/85) of patients with COVID-19 were larger than the upper limit of normal (0.55 mg/L), and the non-survivors had significantly higher D-dimer levels than the survivors.
Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that admission PT-act < 75% was an independent risk factor for mortality in patients with COVID-19 in the present study; however, admission D-dimer > 0.55 mg/L was not an independent risk factor for mortality. Zhou et al. [12] reported that multivariable regression showed increasing odds of in-hospital death associated with D-dimer > 1 μg/mL on admission. Liu et al. [22] found that increased D-dimer levels at admission were closely related to death through multivariable logistic regression. Wu et al. [23] also reported that D-dimer was associated with progression from ARDS to death in bivariate Cox regression analysis. Of course, the differences between our study and other studies may be due to the different research designs and indicator screening. However, the value of PT-act at admission should be given adequate attention when treating patients with COVID-19.
The accuracy of coagulation parameters for predicting in-hospital mortality was evaluated using ROC curve analysis. We found that PT-act, D-dimer, and FDP are significant predictors of mortality. Combined with the fact that PT-act < 75% is an independent risk factor for patient death, we argue that PT-act is a useful index for predicting COVID-19 patient death. Liu et al. [11] reported that using ROC analyses, the AUC values for PT, FDP, and D-dimer at admission were 0.892, 0.81, and 0.809, respectively, for predicting in-hospital mortality in patients with COVID-19. Another study on COVID-19 also indicated that the AUCs of PT and D-dimer at admission were 0.643 and 0.742 for predicting mortality, and they increased to 0.937 and 0.851, respectively, at the composite endpoint [22]. Combined with these studies, we argue that the specific parameters of coagulation function, including PT-act at admission, can effectively predict the prognosis of patients with COVID-19. Although serial measurements may provide more information and guide treatment, testing coagulation parameters at admission still has the advantage of providing doctors with key information in a timely manner and helping doctors give relevant treatments quickly at the early stage of hospitalization.
This study has several limitations. First, this retrospective study was limited by factors that are inherent to retrospective analysis. Second, this was a single-center retrospective study, and the results may not be representative due to the small sample size. However, it may be the first clinical study concerning the predictive value of PT-act at admission for mortality in patients with COVID-19. A multicenter study with a larger sample size is needed to verify our results. Third, we only collected blood coagulation tests at admission and 2 weeks after hospitalization, which may not accurately reflect the continuous dynamic changes of coagulation. Fourth, because there is no ultrasound screening of blood vessels, we do not have data about the occurrence of thrombi in patients. Last, the relatively high mortality rate is related to the severe condition of the patients (the admission PaO2/FiO2 of 68 patients was less than 300) and inadequate early medical conditions. Despite these limitations, we found that PT-act at admission has a predictive and prognostic value, which can enable clinicians to identify patients with COVID-19 who are at a great risk of death in the early stage of the disease.
Finally, it was needed to point out that 81 of the 85 patients included in the present study were also part of other study [24], which did not involve coagulation.