key: cord-0949298-otvx0gwv authors: Fragiel, Marcos; Miró, Òscar; Llorens, Pere; Jiménez, Sònia; Piñera Salmerón, Pascual; Burillo-Putze, Guillermo; Martín, Alfonso; Martín-Sánchez, Francisco Javier; García Lamberechts, Eric Jorge; Jacob, Javier; Alquézar-Arbé, Aitor; Llopis-Roca, Ferran; Pedraza García, Jorge; Calvo López, Ricardo; Maza Vera, María Teresa; Lucas-Imbernón, Francisco Javier; González Martinez, Félix; Juárez, Ricardo; Expósito Rodriguez, Marcos; Martinez Bautista, Beatriz Maria; Niembro Valdés, Ana Patricia; Sanchez Nicolas, Jose Andres; Ferreras Amez, José María; Porta-Etessam, Jesús; Calvo, Elpidio; González del Castillo, Juan title: Incidence, clinical characteristics, risk factors and outcomes of meningoencephalitis in patients with COVID-19 date: 2021-03-09 journal: Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis DOI: 10.1007/s10096-021-04206-5 sha: a7611e81ab32e38716484b34f862edcbc5e59a4d doc_id: 949298 cord_uid: otvx0gwv We investigated the incidence, clinical characteristics, risk factors, and outcome of meningoencephalitis (ME) in patients with COVID-19 attending emergency departments (ED), before hospitalization. We retrospectively reviewed all COVID patients diagnosed with ME in 61 Spanish EDs (20% of Spanish EDs, COVID-ME) during the COVID pandemic. We formed two control groups: non-COVID patients with ME (non-COVID-ME) and COVID patients without ME (COVID-non-ME). Unadjusted comparisons between cases and controls were performed regarding 57 baseline and clinical characteristics and 4 outcomes. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biochemical and serologic findings of COVID-ME and non-COVID-ME were also investigated. We identified 29 ME in 71,904 patients with COVID-19 attending EDs (0.40‰, 95%CI=0.27–0.58). This incidence was higher than that observed in non-COVID patients (150/1,358,134, 0.11‰, 95%CI=0.09–0.13; OR=3.65, 95%CI=2.45–5.44). With respect to non-COVID-ME, COVID-ME more frequently had dyspnea and chest X-ray abnormalities, and neck stiffness was less frequent (OR=0.3, 95%CI=0.1–0.9). In 69.0% of COVID-ME, CSF cells were predominantly lymphocytes, and SARS-CoV-2 antigen was detected by RT-PCR in 1 patient. The clinical characteristics associated with a higher risk of presenting ME in COVID patients were vomiting (OR=3.7, 95%CI=1.4–10.2), headache (OR=24.7, 95%CI=10.2–60.1), and altered mental status (OR=12.9, 95%CI=6.6–25.0). COVID-ME patients had a higher in-hospital mortality than non-COVID-ME patients (OR=2.26; 95%CI=1.04–4.48), and a higher need for hospitalization (OR=8.02; 95%CI=1.19–66.7) and intensive care admission (OR=5.89; 95%CI=3.12–11.14) than COVID-non-ME patients. ME is an unusual form of COVID presentation (<0.5‰ cases), but is more than 4-fold more frequent than in non-COVID patients attending the ED. As the majority of these MEs had lymphocytic predominance and in one patient SARS-CoV-2 antigen was detected in CSF, SARS-CoV-2 could be the cause of most of the cases observed. COVID-ME patients had a higher unadjusted in-hospital mortality than non-COVID-ME patients. Coronavirus disease 2019 , caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), is predominantly characterized by lower respiratory tract and cardiovascular system involvement. However, possible neurological symptoms have been described, such as headache, dizziness, hypogeusia, or neuralgia, even in up to 36.4% of the patients [1] . Nevertheless, the symptoms described are common in many infections and could represent disturbances in neurological function rather than neurological disease. Anosmia and ageusia have received much attention, but are ubiquitous in other common upper respiratory tract infections [2] . Some neurological complications of COVID-19, including meningoencephalitis (ME), have been previously described as case reports [3] [4] [5] . Connections between viral infections and central nervous system (CNS) pathologies are not new. Coronaviruses are not a common cause of neurological disease, but members of coronaviridae have already demonstrated the ability to produce neurological symptoms, including brain inflammation and encephalomyelitis, as well as presumed parainfectious disorders [2, [6] [7] [8] [9] . Detection of SARS-CoV RNA in the CSF of a patient with SARS has been reported [10] . However, the pathophysiological mechanism of illness and the relationship between COVID-19 and CNS involvement remain unclear. The relative expression of the two key coreceptors for SARS-CoV-2 entry, ACE2, and TMPRSS2 has been described across multiple tissues and highlights that there is minimal expression in brain tissue, suggesting that direct brain infection would not be a common phenomenon. The one brain cell type, which does express both genes, is the oligodendrocyte, and therefore, SARS-CoV-2 encephalitis, when present, might be expected to be a predominantly white matter disease [2] . Experimental and clinical studies suggest brainstem involvement and the potential for transneuronal virus transmission in addition to misdirected host immune responses [11] . The real incidence of ME in patients with COVID-19 is currently unknown. There are some sporadically reported cases in patients with COVID-19 [3] [4] [5] . In order to further investigate these aspects, we designed the present study with the following specific objectives: (1) to determine the frequency of ME patients with COVID-19; (2) to describe whether there is any distinctive clinical characteristic in these patients in comparison with ME observed in non-COVID patients; (3) to uncover risk factors associated with the development of ME in patients with and (4) to investigate the outcomes of COVID patients presenting ME. The present study forms part of the Unusual Manifestations of Covid-19 (UMC-19) project, which was designed to investigate the potential relationship between COVID-19 and 10 different entities that could be influenced by SARS-Cov-2 infection itself: Guillain-Barre syndrome, spontaneous pneumothorax, acute pancreatitis, meningoencephalitis, (myo)pericarditis, acute coronary syndrome, deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, ictus, and gastrointestinal bleeding. The main objectives of the UMC-19 project were common for all entities, and consisted in the description of incidence, risk factors, clinical characteristics, and outcomes for each particular entity, using as comparators COVID patients that did not develop this entity as well as non-COVID patients that did present the entity. Details of the project have been extensively presented elsewhere [12] . In Spain, the first case of SARS-Cov-2 infection was detected on January 31 st , 2020, and, accordingly, the definition of the COVID period for patient inclusion in the present study was set from March 1 st to April 30 th , 2020 [13] . During this 61-day period, 213,435 cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in Spain by the Ministry of Health [14] . For the recruitment of controls, the UMC-19 project selected patients from two different periods: one corresponding to the same dates as the cases (from March 1 st to April 30 th , 2020) and one corresponding to same period of the previous year (from March 1 st to April 30 th , 2019). The investigators of the UMC-19 project initially contacted 152 Spanish EDs, which roughly constitute half of the 312 hospital EDs of the Spanish public health network. Of these, 81 were interested in participating and analyzed the protocol, and finally 61 (20% of Spanish EDs) consented to participate and sent all the required data in due time (Fig. 1 ). Altogether these 61 hospitals provide health coverage to 15.2 million citizens (32% of the population of 46.9 million of Spain) and make up a balanced representation of the Spanish territory (representing 12 of the 17 Spanish autonomous communities), type of hospital (community, reference, and high-technology university hospitals were included), and involvement in pandemic (with EDs attending from 1 to 47% of the ED census during the COVID outbreak period corresponding to COVID patients) [12] . The investigation of ME in COVID patients, one of the entities included in the UMC-19 project, was labeled as UMC-19 Study 3 (UMC-19-S 3 ) and consisted in a retrospective, multicenter, case-control study that reviewed the medical reports of COVID patients who attended at Spanish EDs and who were diagnosed as having ME during ED assessment and management, before hospitalization. The case group was formed by COVID patients diagnosed with ME made on the basis of clinical presentation, lumbar puncture, abnormality on electroencephalography, and CT scan. All meningoencephalitis cases fulfill the consensus definition of encephalitis by the International Encephalitis Consortium [15] , and other etiologies were rule out. As we wanted to investigate the role of SARS-CoV-19 in such unusual manifestations, before the patient was hospitalized and treatment with specific drugs had been initiated, the possible meningoencephalitis cases diagnosed during hospitalization were excluded. On the other hand, due to the shortage in all kind of diagnostic tests during the pandemic outbreak, diagnosis of COVID was accepted based on SARS-Cov-2 RNA detection in a nasopharyngeal swab by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), a clinically compatible clinical picture, or the presence of the typical lung parenchymal infiltrates in chest X-ray or pulmonary CT in patients with some clinical symptoms attributable to COVID. Diagnostic adjudication was made by the principal investigator of each center, without external review. We defined two different control groups. One group was formed by all non-COVID patients with a diagnosis of ME attending the ED during the same period as the cases (March 1 st to April 30 th , 2020), which was defined in the same terms as cases. In order to avoid that some of these control cases could eventually have inadvertent infection by SARS-Cov-2, in this group, we also included all patients with ME diagnosed in the ED from March 1 st to April 30 th , 2019, just 1 year before the COVID pandemic. This group, named non- COVID-ME (control group A), was specifically designed to uncover the particular distinctive clinical characteristics of ME developed in COVID patients with respect to ME developed in the general population. The second control group was formed by COVID patients (without ME) attending the ED during the same period of the COVID outbreak used for case inclusion (March 1 st to April 30 th , 2020). This group was formed by selecting 10 COVID patients for every case detected by each center. Selection was randomly performed by the inclusion of the 5+5 COVID patients seen immediately before and after each case included by the center. This group, named COVID-non-ME (control group B), was specifically designed to determine the risk factors for ME development in COVID patients. We collected 57 independent variables, which included 2 demographic data (age, sex), 12 comorbidities (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, active smoker, hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes mellitus, coronary artery disease, obesity-clinically estimated, cerebrovascular disease, chronic kidney disease-creatinine >2 mg/ dL, dementia, active cancer), 26 signs and symptoms recorded at ED arrival (time elapsed since symptoms started to ED attendance, fever, rhinorrhea, cough, expectoration, dyspnea, chest pain, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, altered mental status, headache, anosmia, dysgeusia, meningeal signs (neck stiffness, Kernig's sign, and Brudzinski's sign), Glasgow coma scale, temperature, systolic blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, room air pulsioxymetry, ronchus, whistles, rales), 13 laboratory parameters (C-reactive protein (CRP), creatinine, sodium, potassium, aspartate amino transferase (AST), bilirubin, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), procalcitonin, hemoglobin, leucocytes, lymphocytes, platelets, D-dimer), and 4 radiological findings in chest X-ray (cardiomegaly, lung interstitial infiltrates, ground-glass opacities, and pleural effusion). For the cases and control group A patients, we also reviewed data from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis, including glucose, proteins, cells, and microbiological results. We defined 4 different outcomes for cases and controls consisting in (1) the need for hospitalization; (2) the need to be admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU); (3) prolonged hospitalization (defined as a length of stay >7 days, which is the median length of stay of hospitalized patients in Spain); and (4) in-hospital all-cause mortality. Discrete variables were expressed as absolute values and percentages, and continuous variables as mean and standard deviation (SD) or median and interquartile range (IQR) if not normally distributed. Incidences were expressed as cases per thousand patients (‰) with 95% confidence interval (CI). Differences between case group and controls groups were assessed by the chi-square test (or Fisher exact test if needed) for qualitative variables, and Student's t test (or the Mann-Whitney non-parametric test if non-normally distributed) for quantitative variables. The magnitude of associations was expressed as unadjusted odds ratio (OR) with 95%CI (for continuous variables, associations were dichotomized using clinically meaningful cutoffs). As the number of cases expected to be identified was not large, we did not plan to go further in the investigation of the significant relationships identified in the unadjusted analysis by using adjusted models. In all comparisons, statistical significance was accepted if the p value was < 0.05 or if 95%CI of the risk estimations excluded the value 1. The analyses were performed with the SPSS (v.24) statistical software package (IBM, Armonk, NY, USA). The UMC-19 project was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Hospital Clínic of Barcelona (Spain), with the reference number HCB/2020/0534, that acted as the central ethical committee. Under the exceptional circumstances generated by the COVID-19, the urgent need to obtain feasible data related to this new disease, and the non-interventional and retrospective nature of the project, obtainment of written permission from patients to be included in the study was waived. All the patients were codified by investigators of the participating centers before their data were entered into the general database, as patient identity remained anonymous for investigators who analyzed the database. The UMC-19-S 3 was carried out in strict compliance with the Declaration of Helsinki principles. The authors designed the study, gathered and analyzed the data, vouched for the data and analysis, wrote the paper, and decided to publish. EDs attended 486,833 patients (average of 131 patients/day/ ED), and 71,904 (14.8%) were diagnosed with COVID-19. On the other hand, during the pre-COVID phase of the study, 943,205 patients were seen in the ED (average of 253 patients/ day/ED). Patient inclusion in each group is presented in Fig. 1 . We identified 29 ME in COVID patients (frequency=0.40‰, 95%CI=0.27-0.58), and these individuals constituted the case group. Among the remaining 1,358,134 non-COVID patients attended in EDs, 150 were diagnosed as having ME (frequen-cy=0.11‰, 95%CI=0.09-0.13). These patients constituted control group A (non-COVID-ME). In comparison to non-COVID patients coming to the ED, COVID patients exhibited a significantly higher frequency of ME (OR=3.65, 95%CI=2.45-5.44). On the other hand, control group B was made up of 290 randomly selected COVID patients without ME (COVID-non-ME) during the same period. Infection by SARS-CoV-2 was confirmed by RT-PCR in 48.3% and 74.8% of patients in the case group and control group B, respectively (p=0.002). Regarding the diagnosis of COVID patients in the COVID-ME patients with a negative RT-PCR result, this was based on the presence of respiratory symptoms with interstitial lung infiltrates or ground-glass lung opacities in the X-ray or pulmonary CT. The mean age of the case group was 57.0 (SD 23.1) years and 17 (58.6) were female. The remaining baseline characteristics of these patients are shown in Table 1 . Compared to non-COVID-ME, case group patients more frequently had dyspnea and chest X-ray abnormalities (Tables 1, 2, 3, and 4). Neck stiffness was less frequent in COVID-ME patients that in non-COVID-ME. From the analytical point of view, COVID-ME patients more frequently had increased in CRP, LDH, and D-dimer levels, and decreased leucocyte and lymphocyte counts. The biochemistry and cell pattern of CFS are described in Table 3 , being similar in both groups. Regarding microbiological findings in the CFS, it should be highlighted that after cultures, antigen testing, and multiplex PCR, no microbiological diagnosis was achieved in patients with COVID infection, except one patient who was RT-PCR positive for SARS-CoV-2 in CSF (Table 3) . When we compared cases with control group B patients, we observed that headache (OR 24.7, 95%CI 10.165-60.149), altered mental status (OR 12.864, 95%CI 6.615-25.016), neck stiffness (OR 12.154, 95%CI 8.410-17.564), and vomiting (OR 3.7, 95%CI 1.353-10.234) were associated with a higher risk of ME in COVID patients. Respiratory symptoms were more frequent in COVID-non-ME patients than in COVID-ME patients (Tables 1, 2, 3, and 4) . Comparing the case group with control group A, the need for hospitalization was present in 28 (96.6%) COVID-ME patients and in 148 (98.7%) non-COVID-ME patients (p=0.417), while admission to the ICU occurred in 12 (42.9%) COVID-ME patients and in 39 (26.4%) non-COVID-ME patients (p=0.077). In addition, hospitalization longer than 7 days was observed in 13 (44.8%) COVID-ME patients and in 53 (35.3%) non-COVID-ME patients Table 1 Baseline characteristics of patients with COVID-19 with meningoencephalitis and comparison with patients without COVID-19 with meningoencephalitis (control group A) and with patients with COVID-19 without meningoencephalitis (control group B). Control group A (non-COVID-ME) N=150 Control group B (COVID-non-ME) N=290 COVID-non-ME patients (p=0.011), while admission to an ICU was observed in 12 (42.9%) COVID-ME patients and in 16 (7.3%) COVID-non-ME patients (p<0.001). Hospitalization longer than 7 days was shown in 13 (44.8%) COVID-ME patients and in 80 (27.6%) COVID-non-ME 66.672) and admission to an ICU (OR=5.893; 95%CI=3.117-11.140), which were higher than in COVID-non-ME patients (Fig. 2 ). ME is a life-threatening infection associated with substantial mortality and a risk of permanent disability in survivors despite the availability of highly active antibiotics and advances in providing intensive care to critically ill patients [16] . The ME syndrome is not usually observed as a form of COVID presentation, but its incidence is higher than that observed for non-COVID patients. We found that around 0.40‰ of COVID patients in the ED had ME. While this incidence, which was determined during a 2-month period of the COVID pandemic, should be considered as low, it is more than 4-fold higher than what is usually seen in non-COVID patients. The epidemiology of ME is highly dependent on geographical factors, the development of society, and the number of preventive interventions, with an incidence of 0.6-4 cases per 100,000 adults/year in developed countries [17, 18] . In the current report, and taking into account the catchment area of the 61 EDs participating in the UMC-19-S 3 study (15.2 million inhabitants), the standardized incidence of ME was 3.5 per 100,000 person/year (or 3.0 if we discount ME cases observed in patients with . Therefore, these figures are close to those previously reported and reinforce the reliability of the data presented in the UMC-19-S 3 study and suggest a direct role of SARS-CoV-2 infection in many of the cases of ME seen during the COVID-19 pandemic. The profile of patients with ME in COVID patients is not different from that of ME observed in the general population in terms of demographics and comorbidity. Neck stiffness was less frequent in COVID-ME patients that in non-COVID-ME, and there was a tendency to a lower frequency of Kernig's and Brudzinski's signs. Within the context of a pandemic, this fact may hamper the clinical diagnosis of ME and not overlook any finding. The sensitivity of the classic triad of fever, neck stiffness, and altered mental status is low (44%), but almost all of these patients presented at least two out of the four symptoms-headache, fever, neck stiffness, and altered mental status [19] . Headache, altered metal status, and fever are present with the same frequency in COVID-ME and non-COVID-ME. All of these symptoms must make physicians aware of a possible diagnosis of ME even during the pandemic. Actually, although COVID-19 preferentially affects the respiratory system, neurological symptoms (such as headache, dizziness, hypogeusia, and neuralgia) and complications (encephalopathy, acute cerebrovascular diseases, impaired consciousness, and skeletal muscular injury) have also been described [1, 5, 20, 21] . Indeed, headache, altered metal status, neck stiffness, and vomiting were associated with a higher risk of ME in COVID patients. Nevertheless, the symptoms described are commonplace in many severe infections and could represent disturbances in neurological function rather than neurological disease per se, and therefore, suspicion of ME is important to begin the diagnostic process. Coronaviruses are not primarily neurotropic virus, and their primary target is the respiratory epithelium. The target receptor for attachment to cells is through the angiotensin converting enzyme-2 receptor (ACE 2). These receptors are also found in glial cells in the brain and spinal neurons. Hence, it can attach, multiply, and damage neuronal tissue. Some mechanism of brain invasion has been postulated: (1) a retrograde transfer via the olfactory epithelium or through the cribriform bone; (2) disruption of the blood-brain barrier during the viremia phase of illness causing the virus to enter the brain directly; and (3) invasion of peripheral nerve terminals by CoV which then gains entry to the CNS through the synapse connected route [1, 5, 11, 20] . However, the mechanism by which the CNS is affected is still unclear. CSF detection of coronavirus RNA seems to be infrequent [22, 23] . Although RT-PCR of CSF was negative/not performed in the majority of patients, the CSF profiles compatible with viral ME, the large screening for usual pathogens with negative results, the temporal association with a COVID diagnosis, and the knowledge that coronaviruses are known for their neurological tropism for inducing encephalitis suggest that SAR-CoV-2 could have been the pathogen responsible for the ME disease in several of our cases. In fact, in one COVID-ME patient, the SARS-CoV-2 antigen was detected in CSF by RT-PCR, demonstrating the invasive capacity of the virus. This is not unexpected, since over a number of years, human coronaviruses including SARS-CoV have been identified as possible pathogens for pathologies outside the respiratory systems [21, 24, 25] . One report showed that SARS-CoV genome sequences were detected by RT-PCR in brains of all SARS autopsies [26] . Several predictors of unfavorable outcome have been described [27] : septic shock, seizures, advanced age, low CSF glucose, low CSF leukocyte count and high protein, systemic compromise, coma, pneumococcal ethiology, high APACHE II score, cranial nerve paresis, high erythrocyte sedimentation rate, absence of fever, and longer interval to treatment. Among these, the more frequent systemic compromise seen in COVID-ME patients could explain the increases in mortality. Case group patients more frequently had dyspnea, chest Xray abnormalities, and higher acute-phase reactants. This study has several limitations. First, the diagnosis of ME was based on clinical manifestations, lumbar puncture, abnormality on electroencephalography, and CT scan findings, and RT-PCR in CSF was not performed in the majority of patients. However, as explained in the "Discussion" section, a relationship between ME and SARS-CoV-2 is plausible. Second, in about half of the COVID patients with ME, SARS-CoV-2 infection was not demonstrated by RT-PCR nasopharyngeal swab, and diagnosis was based exclusively on clinical findings and the presence of the typical lung parenchymal infiltrates in chest X-ray or pulmonary CT. However, this has been the case in many countries, due to the reagent shortage experienced at the beginning of the pandemic [28, 29] . Third, as the number of cases was not large, we could not further investigate the significant relationships identified in the unadjusted analysis by using adjusted models. However, ME is a very uncommon disease, and it is very difficult to add cases quickly enough even in a national network to communicate the results during the pandemic. Additionally, a type II error cannot be ruled out due to the limited sample size of our series. Fourth, the retrospective nature of the study could have led to a loss of cases and information in the different sites. Although this information was collected from the electronic databases of the EDs, a possible selection bias cannot be ruled out, and it cannot be ensured that all the possible cases in the different hospitals were collected. Nonetheless, we believe that the results reliably reflect the epidemiology and the characteristics of ME during the COVID pandemic. Despite these limitations, we conclude that the incidence of ME in COVID patients attending the ED is low, at about 0.4‰, but it is much higher than in the non-COVID population. This suggests a potential role of SARS-CoV-2 as an additional viral infection causative of ME, which could be responsible for many of the lymphocytic ME cases seen during the pandemic. In fact, the presence of the SARS-CoV-2 antigen was detected in the CSF of one of the patients included in the UMC-19-S 3 . Therefore, the presence of headache, altered mental status, neck stiffness, and vomiting in COVID patients should be a red flag for physicians evaluating COVID patients. The ME-COVID group had an increased risk for in-hospital mortality than non-COVID-ME. Hospital Universitario Central Asturias: Desire María Velarde Herrera Data analysis and first draft writing were done by JGC, OM, and MF. All authors read this draft and provided insight for the final version Neurologic Manifestations of Hospitalized Patients With Coronavirus Disease 2019 in Wuhan. China Neurological Implications of COVID-19 Infections SARS-CoV-2 Detected in Cerebrospinal Fluid by PCR in a Case of COVID-19 Encephalitis Meningoencephalitis without respiratory failure in a young female patient with COVID-19 infection in Downtown Los Angeles Neurological manifestations and complications of COVID-19: A literature review Neurological Complications during Treatment of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Neurological Complications of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus: A Report of Two Cases and Review of the Literature Severe neurologic syndrome associated with Middle East respiratory syndrome corona virus (MERS-CoV) Human Coronaviruses and Other Respiratory Viruses: Underestimated Opportunistic Pathogens of the Central Nervous System Detection of SARS coronavirus RNA in the cerebrospinal fluid of a patient with severe acute respiratory syndrome Neurological Impact of Coronavirus Disease of 2019: Practical Considerations for the Neuroscience Community Collaboration among Spanish emergency departments to promote research: on the creation of the SIESTA (Spanish Investigators on Emergengy Situations TeAm) retwork and the coordination of the UMC-19 (Unusual Manifestations of COVID-19) macroproject Epidemiapor COVID-19 en Madrid: crónica de un reto Accessed: 1-6-2020 et al; International Encephalitis Consortium. Case definitions, diagnostic algorithms, and priorities in encephalitis: consensus statement of the international encephalitis consortium Meningitis in adults: diagnosis and management The changing pattern of bacterial meningitis in adult patients at a large tertiary university hospital in Epidemiology, diagnosis, and antimicrobial treatment of acute bacterial meningitis Community-acquired bacterial meningitis in adults Neurologic Features in Severe SARS-CoV-2 Infection A first case of meningitis/encephalitis associated with SARS-Coronavirus-2 Two patients with acute meningoencephalitis concomitant with SARS-CoV-2 infection Neurologic Alterations Due to Respiratory Virus Infections Multiple organ infection and the pathogenesis of SARS MERS: emergence of a novel human coronavirus Neuropathological Features of Covid-19 Acute bacterial meningitis in adults: predictors of outcome Analysis of clinical characteristics and outcomes in patients with COVID-19 based on a series of 1000 patients treated in Spanish emergency departments Diagnostic groups and short-term outcomes in suspected COVID-19 cases treated in an emergency department Publisher's note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations Acknowledgments The SIESTA network is formed by the following researchers and centers (all from Spain): Conflict of interest The authors declare no competing interests.