The Predictive Value of Oxidative Stress Index in Patients with Confirmed SARS-COV-2 Infection

Authors

  • Joško Osredkar Clinical Institute of Clinical Chemistry and Biochemistry
  • Sara Pucko Clinical Institute of Clinical Chemistry and Biochemistry
  • Milica Lukić Infectious Diseases Department
  • Teja Fabjan Clinical Institute of Clinical Chemistry and Biochemistry http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7647-8882
  • Elizabeta Božnar Alič Clinical Institute of Clinical Chemistry
  • Kristina Kumer Clinical Institute of Clinical Chemistry
  • Maria Martin Rodriguez University of Alcala
  • Matjaž Jereb Infectious Diseases Department

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17344/acsi.2022.7432

Keywords:

Oxidative stress, SARS-CoV-2, OSI Index

Abstract

Disbalance balance between oxidants and antioxidants is called oxidative stress and could be presented as oxidative stress index (OSI). OSI is determined by the reactive oxygen metabolites (d-ROM test) to assess oxidants and the plasma antioxidant capacity test (PAT test) to measure antioxidants. The aim of the study was to evaluate the predictive value of OSI in the disease COVID-19. d-ROMs results were the highest in the SARS-CoV-2 POSITIVE group (365+/-112), lower in the SARS-CoV-2 NEGATIVE group (314+/-72.4), and the lowest in an INTENSIVE CARE UNIT group (ICU) (277+/-142) U.Carr. PAT test values were the lowest in the SARS-CoV-2 POSITIVE group (2762+/-387), higher in the ICU group (2772 +/-786), and the highest in the SARS-CoV-2 NEGATIVE group (2808+/-470), and are not statistically significantly different (P>0.05), while OSI was: healthy with average value of 49 and the critical ill with average value of 109 (P = 0.016). Cut-offs for predicting ICUs admission was at OSI 62, with 80.0% sensitivity and 68.2% specificity.

Published

26.09.2022

Issue

Section

Biomedical applications