Seroprevalence of community-acquired atypical bacterial pneumonia among adult COVID-19 patients from a single center in Al Madinah Al Munawarah, Saudi Arabia: A retrospective cohort study

沙特阿拉伯麦地那穆纳瓦拉单中心成年 COVID-19 患者社区获得性非典型细菌性肺炎血清流行率:一项回顾性队列研究

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作者:Sari T Alhoufie, Nadir A Ibrahim, Naif H Alsharif, Khalid O Alfarouk, Hatim M Makhdoom, Khaled R Aljabri, Sayed H Saeed, Adnan A Khoumaeys, Yahya A Almutawif, Mustafa A Najim, Hamza M Ali, Alanoud A Aljifri, Ali M Kheyami, Areej A Alhazmi

Conclusion

Our study documented the seroprevalence of community-acquired bacteria co-infection among COVID-19 patients. In this study, procalcitonin was an inconclusive biomarker for non-severe bacterial co-infections among COVID-19 patients. Consideration and proper detection of community-acquired bacterial co-infection may minimize misdiagnosis during the current pandemic and positively reflect disease management and prognosis.

Methods

In this cohort study, we retrospectively investigated the seroprevalence of Chlamydia pneumoniae, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Legionella pneumophila among randomly selected 189 confirmed COVID-19 patients at their time of hospital presentation via commercial immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies against these bacteria. We also carried out quantitative measurements of procalcitonin in patients' serum.

Results

The seropositivity for L. pneumophila was 12.6%, with significant distribution among patientsolder than 50 years (χ2 test, p=0.009), while those of M. pneumoniae was 6.3% and C. pneumoniae was 2.1%, indicating an overall co-infection rate of 21% among COVID-19 patients. No significant difference (χ2 test, p=0.628) in the distribution of bacterial co-infections existed between male and female patients. Procalcitonin positivity was confirmed amongst 5% of co-infected patients.

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