Prevalence of SARS-Cov-2 Specific Igm and Igg Antibodies in A Cardiovascular Population

Introduction: A great proportion of hospitalized Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients have cardiovascular comorbidities. Immunity status for COVID-19 can be determined using serological testing, where the rapid serological test kits as Lateral Flow Immunoassays (LFIAs) are the most practical instruments. Aim: The aim of this study was to determine the seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 in a cardiovascular population and compare it with the seropositivity of Stockholm’s general population during the same period. Materials and Methods: Consecutive patients were screened with nasopharynx PCR and LFIAs for SARS-CoV-2 during the admission for their planned cardiovascular interventions or surgeries. Complementary data were extracted from medical journals. Results: A total of 175 consecutive patients with cardiovascular comorbidities were tested between May 25 and June 12, 2020. The median age was 64.0 years (interquartile range, 54.0-74.0; range 20-97 years) and 69.7% of the patients were male. Hypertension and electrophysiologic study/intervention were the most common comorbidity and planned intervention, respectively. A total of 12 patients had positive serology results, giving a seroprevalence of 6.9%. False positive IgM was found in 8 patients (4.6%). Conclusion: The lower COVID-19 specific seroprevalence of this cohort compared to that of the general population of Stockholm could be due to self-quarantine or an acquired cellular rather than humoral immune response.


Introduction
The Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome-Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) was identified as the cause of a cluster of atypical pneumonia cases resembling viral pneumonia in late 2019 in Wuhan, Hubei province, central China [1,2]. It is responsible for the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID- 19), which WHO announced as a pandemic on 11 March 2020 [3]. COVID-19 diagnosis through Real-Time Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) carries several limitations including false negative results, significantly lower sensitivity than chest CT and safety issues [4][5][6][7]. PCR should be used 1-7 days Post Symptom Onset (PSO) for highest detection rates but not later than 5. 5-8.0 days PSO as serology detection rate is higher [5,8]. Antibody responses against and progression to a cardiogenic shock have been observed in COVID-19 patients [22][23][24]. Likewise, cardiac complications were seen during the SARS and MERS outbreaks [25,26]. The COVID-19 seroprevalence in a cardiovascular population and whether it differs from the general population remains unclear, even though they constitute a great proportion of hospitalized COVID-19 cases. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 specific antibodies among individuals with underlying cardiovascular diseases and compare it with the seropositivity of Stockholm's general population during the same period.

Materials and Method Study Design and Participants
For this prospective single-center study, consecutive cardiovascular patients planned for elective cardiovascular interventions or surgeries between May 25 and June 12, 2020 were enrolled at Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, Sweden. Patients with positive antibody results were followedup >3 months after the initial screening with new NPH PCR, LFIA and data regarding persistent and/or new symptoms since the screening timepoint. Controls were randomly chosen among the negative cases and were followed-up with LFIA and symptom questionnaire. This study was approved by the National Ethics committee (2020-02025). Written informed consent was obtained from every enrolled patient.

Real-Time RT-PCR on Nasopharynx Swab Specimen
The protocol for collecting NPH swab was followed as provided by the manufacturer Xpert ® Xpress SARS-CoV-2.

Serology -Combined Antibody Test
A POC-T using colloidal gold-immunochromatographic assay for detection of IgM and/or IgG was used. This LFIA was designed and manufactured by Livzon Diagnostics Inc (Guangdong, China), approved by Chinese FDA for SARS-CoV-2. This test uses N-S recombinant protein as capture. Manufacturer's instructions were followed and the samples were checked within 15 minutes for the binary readout. In presence of antibodies, the SARS-CoV-2 antigen binds to the individual's SARS-CoV-2 specific IgG and/or IgM antibodies as blood sample flows through the device's cartridge. There are maximum 3 detection bands on the combined IgM-IgG cassettes, one quality control line (C line) and two test lines for IgM and IgG (M and G lines, respectively).
Results are positive when red/pink line(s) appear at C line in combination with presence of M and/or G lines depending on the antibody status of the patient. When negative, only the single C line appears red/pink. The test was redone in cases without color reaction at C line as the test is invalid. Laboratories already faced high volume analysis burden and this cohort was regarded as non-COVID-19 or asymptomatic/mild-symptomatic COVID-19 individuals planned for cardiovascular interventions/surgeries rather than a confirmed COVID-19 cohort, thereby serology quantification was not conducted parallel to the LFIA.

Result Interpretation
LFIA with positive IgG, isolated or in combination with positive IgM, were considered as "positive" cases. Isolated positive IgM in absence of positive NPH PCR, symptoms during the recent 5 months and/or epidemiologic history of COVID-19 was regarded as a false positive result.

Statistical Analysis
Continuous variables were presented using Mean (SD), median, interquartile range (IQR) and range. Categorical variables were presented as numbers (percentages).

Complementary Data Collection
Complementary data were collected from medical journals including demographic data, comorbidities of interest (cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, respiratory, nephrological and neurological) and ejection fraction from echocardiography studies.

Nucleic Acid and Serology Results at Screening
A total of 7 patients (4.0%) had positive NPH PCR, where 6 of them were both positive for IgM and IgG and 1 was positive only for IgM. Overview of the test results are presented by Table 2

Reported Symptoms by the Positive Cases
Out of the 12 positive patients, 4 were asymptomatic during the recent 5 months at the screening time. Among the 8 symptomatic patients, fever (58.3%) was the dominant symptom followed by non-productive cough. The other symptoms are presented by Table 3.

Follow-up
Out of the 12 positive cases, 9 patients carried out the follow-up tests but 3 patients declined a follow-up due to the risk of COVID-19 transmission. None of the 9 patients tested positive for NPH PCR. 8 of the patients had similar antibody results as at the screening time, while 1 patient had positive IgM and IgG at the screening but had only positive IgM at the follow-up. One of the patients still had breathing difficulties, anosmia and hypogeusia. A total of 20 negative cases were followed-up as controls, where none had positive antibody results and none reported symptoms since the screening.

Discussion
There are currently limited data on SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence among cardiovascular patients. We screened consecutive patients of this subpopulation to address this knowledge gap. Seropositivity was defined by having 1) positive IgM together with positive NPH PCR, epidemiology and/or a symptomatic period, 2) positive IgG or 3) positive IgM and IgG, giving a seroprevalence of 6.9% in this cardiovascular cohort. A total seroprevalence of 4.04% was found among 28,792 healthcare workers in Denmark mid-April, with undoubtedly higher exposure to SARS-CoV-2 than our self-isolated cohort, also using the Livzon kit [28]. This lower seroprevalence could be explained by the higher extent of COVID-19 transmission across Sweden than Denmark at the beginning of April [29]. The public health agency of Sweden reported a seroprevalence of 9.3-11.5% in samples from Stockholm's outpatient clinics during weeks 22-24, the same period as this cohort was screened [27].
Considering seroprevalence of Stockholm's general population during the same period, the time that has lapsed since COVID-19 outbreak in Sweden and knowing that seroconversion often occurs within 2 weeks PSO, a higher seroprevalence than 6.9% would be expected [5,6,8,[11][12][13][14]27]. One possible explanation could be that a great proportion of our cohort selfisolated during the pandemic because of risk factors as high age and cardiovascular comorbidity [17,18,21]. Self-isolation may also explain the lower seroprevalence of the 65-95 years old group during weeks 22-24 than the younger inhabitants of Stockholm [27]. At the follow-up, all the negative controls had negative serology results and seropositivity remained in all positive cases. However, 4.6% of the positive IgM results were regarded as false positive and 1 positive case at the screening (positive IgM and IgG) had an isolated positive IgM at the >3 months follow-up.
SARS-CoV-2 specific T lymphocytes demonstrate memory phenotype, and might be the key cells responsible for recovery of COVID-19 in cases with very low neutralizing antibody levels [31,32]. In case of SARS; IgG titers were undetectable after 2 years, while SARS-CoV specific memory T-cells persist up to 17 years after infection in 15 SARS recovered patients and even show cross-reactivity with SARS-CoV-2 peptides [33,34]. SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies and S protein-specific B cells were undetectable in a young convalescent patient with COVID-19 pneumonia 3 months PSO [35]. However, SARS-CoV-2 specific memory T cells show robust responses in seronegative individuals in convalescent phase after asymptomatic/mild COVID-19 [31]. These findings suggest that T cells could provide multispecific and long-lasting acquired humoral immunity. Testing consecutive cases allowed us to study a heterogenous group rather than selected individuals.
Several limitations of this study need to be addressed. A multicenter study using a larger cohort would provide a more comprehensive picture of the cardiovascular population's seroprevalence and simultaneously minimizing the inevitable selection bias accompanied with a single center study. Lateral flow tests were not confirmed with quantitative titer measurement for verification of the results. Furthermore, sensitivity and specificity analyses for the LFIA were not conducted in this study.

Conclusion
The seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 in this cardiovascular cohort was lower than that of Stockholm's general population. This lower seroprevalence could be due to self-isolation of this cohort or development of a cellular rather than a humoral immunity against SARS-CoV-2.