Low prevalence and disease severity of COVID-19 in post-liver transplant recipients—A single centre experience

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Abstract

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by a novel coronavirus called severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) is driving a present day global pandemic. Immunosuppressed patients are regarded as a high-risk cohort. The following is a short report on COVID-19 in liver transplant recipients (n = 5) from a high volume UK liver transplant unit with a large follow-up cohort (n = 4500). Based on this limited data, liver transplant recipients appear to have a low incidence of COVID-19, with less severe symptoms than expected, when compared with the general population and other solid organ recipients. This possibly could be related to self-isolation adherence and/or the ‘ideal’ level of immunosuppression that favourably modulates the immune response to COVID-19.

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Verma, A., Khorsandi, S. E., Dolcet, A., Prachalias, A., Suddle, A., Heaton, N., & Jassem, W. (2020). Low prevalence and disease severity of COVID-19 in post-liver transplant recipients—A single centre experience. Liver International, 40(8), 1972–1976. https://doi.org/10.1111/liv.14552

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