key: cord-0868474-clwbt35h authors: Hultström, Michael; Persson, Barbro; Eriksson, Oskar; Lipcsey, Miklos; Frithiof, Robert; Nilsson, Bo title: Blood type A associates with critical COVID-19 and death in a Swedish cohort date: 2020-08-12 journal: Crit Care DOI: 10.1186/s13054-020-03223-8 sha: cdbd5608d3a53cb4789d647580fd263ffccdae99 doc_id: 868474 cord_uid: clwbt35h nan Michael Hultström 1,2* † , Barbro Persson 3 † , Oskar Eriksson 3 , Miklos Lipcsey 1 , Robert Frithiof 1 † and Bo Nilsson 3 † To the editor, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is primarily associated with respiratory failure, but both renal and circulatory failure is common in patients that require critical care or die of the disease [1] . A recently published GWAS showed a strong association between severe COVID-19 and the ABO blood group locus in a cohort from Italy and Spain, with a higher risk for patients with blood group A [2] . This is consistent with data on susceptibility to COVID-19 being associated with blood group in Chinese [3] . Although the GWAS dataset did not include data on mortality, there is a preliminary report in an American cohort that blood group A is associated with both severity of COVID-19 and death [4] . Here, we present data on blood type distribution from a Swedish critical care cohort (n = 64) compared to the blood type distribution in the population as a whole: A 43%, AB 4%, B 9%, and O 44% giving a dichotomized distribution of A/AB 47% to B/O 53% [5] . Blood typing was performed using routine clinical procedures at the Clinical Immunology and Transfusion Medicine at the University Hospital in Uppsala. Using the population blood type distribution to estimate the expected frequencies, we found an association of blood type A with the risk of requiring critical care (HR (95% CI) = 2.01 (1.23-3.28)) and increased risk of death within 30 days (HR (95% CI) = 3.16 (1.28-7.77)) in COVID-19 (Fig. 1) . This indicates that the findings in the previous studies are consistent also in a northern European population. Although the present study does not investigate the mechanism behind the association, one potential mechanism that may be involved in the increased risk linked to blood type antigen A is that it contains a galactose as end group saccharide. Both blood type B and O have a galactose amine in this position, which may explain the difference between the blood groups. The spike protein of SARS-COV-2 has been shown to bind carbohydrates, and a strong affinity between the A antigen and the virus could facilitate uptake of the virus into the cells [6] . Limitations of the present dataset is a relatively low number of patients, which in this case goes with a difference in the average age of 63 years for the A/AB group compared to 55 years for the B/O group. In addition, there is a difference in sex distribution of 81% male in the A/AB and 69% in the B/O. Both of these effects would tend to lead to an overestimation of the effect of blood type A/AB in the present dataset, which would tend to bring the results more in line with the previously published risk profile [6] . In conclusion, we show that blood type A or AB is associated with an increased risk of requiring critical care or dying of COVID-19 in the Swedish population. Taken together, with previously published data, this indicates that blood group A is a risk factor for disease severity and death in COVID-19 irrespective of the genetic background. Clinical characteristics of 113 deceased patients with coronavirus disease 2019: retrospective study Genomewide association study of severe Covid-19 with respiratory failure Association between ABO blood groups and risk of SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia Testing the association between blood type and COVID-19 infection, intubation, and death The blood group antigen facts book, 3 edn Novel ACE2-independent carbohydrate-binding of SARS-CoV-2 spike protein to host lectins and lung microbiota Publisher's Note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations The authors thank research nurses Joanna Wessbergh and Elin Söderman and the biobank assistants Erik Danielsson and Philip Karlsson for their expertise in compiling the study. All authors participated in the conception and design of the study. All authors had access to the data and participated in data collection and interpretation. MH drafted the manuscript, and all authors contributed to manuscript revision and gave approval of the final version.