martes, 19 de mayo de 2020

Researchers are developing a diagnostic test that predicts the advanced stages of COVID-19 patients

Researchers are developing a diagnostic test that predicts the advanced stages of COVID-19 patients

News-Medical

Researchers are developing a diagnostic test that predicts the advanced stages of COVID-19 patients

A research team from the University of Valencia, led by Professor Juan Saus from the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, is developing a project to provide the healthcare system with a diagnostic test that anticipates the entry into advanced stages of patients with COVID-19 and a scalable oral treatment for the disease.
The proposal has the support of the Valencian Government, within the call "Capacities of the Valencian System of Innovation in the fight against COVID-19", which finances actions that provide innovative solutions to the new coronavirus.
Goodpasture syndrome has been the subject of study by the research group led by Juan Saus at the University of Valencia since 1988. It is a pulmonary haemorrhage with kidney failure that currently manifests itself very sporadically and that, thanks to new discoveries made by Saus' team, has given way to a therapeutic proposal for COVID-19.
GPBP (Goodpasture antigen binding protein), when overexpressed and accumulates outside the cell, causes a destructuring of the microenvironment and transforms thin membranous structures into thick fibrous walls that make it difficult for oxygenation and blood purification in the lung and kidney."
Juan Saus, Professor, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Valencia
"This established the basis for the development of EMTEST, a prototype to measure GPBP in blood and T12, a compound specifically designed to inhibit it", explains Juan Saus.
The research team observed that GPBP accumulates in the lungs of patients with a condition of severe respiratory distress called adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), caused by infections or sepsis.
"There are increasing amounts of evidence that a sepsis with a predominance of lung involvement is the cause of fatality in COVID-19", explains Saus.
"With sepsis, antibacterial or antiviral treatments are not effective enough in stopping the process. Once ARDS has been triggered in COVID-19 patients, a treatment that eliminates the coronavirus is not expected to significantly modify the fatal course of the disease", concludes the expert.
For this reason, the project wants to use EMTEST to measure GPBP in the blood of COVID-19 patients and anticipate the appearance of ARDS. Then, with controlled GPBP levels, administer T12 to COVID-19 patients at risk of respiratory distress to avoid the onset of this disease.
"With this proposal we want to develop a diagnosis of the imminence of ARDS and a specific treatment to improve the survival of people with COVID-19 and avoid collapses in the Health System", says Juan Saus.

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