Individuals with blood type O may have lowest risk of infection

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Studies Offer New Evidence for Possible Link Between Blood Type and COVID-19 Susceptibility and Severity

OCT 14 2020


Individuals with blood type O may have lowest risk of infection; individuals with A and AB may have increased risk of severe clinical outcomes
(WASHINGTON, Oct. 14, 2020) — Two studies published today in Blood Advances suggest people with blood type O may have a lower risk of COVID-19 infection and reduced likelihood of severe outcomes, including organ complications, if they do get sick.

As the pandemic continues, the global biomedical research community is working urgently to identify coronavirus risk factors and potential therapeutic targets. The potential role of blood type in predicting risk and complications of COVID-19 infection has emerged as an important scientific question. These new studies add evidence that there may be an association between blood type and vulnerability to COVID-19; however, additional research is needed to better understand why and what it means for patients.

INDIVIDUALS WITH BLOOD TYPE O MAY BE LESS VULNERABLE TO COVID-19 INFECTION
Blood type O may offer some protection against COVID-19 infection, according to a retrospective study. Researchers compared Danish health registry data from more than 473,000 individuals tested for COVID-19 to data from a control group of more than 2.2 million people from the general population. Among the COVID-19 positive, they found fewer people with blood type O and more people with A, B, and AB types.

The study results suggest that people with blood types A, B, or AB may be more likely to be infected with COVID-19 than people with type O. The researchers did not find any significant difference in rate of infection between A, B, and AB types. Since blood group distributions vary among ethnic subgroups, the researchers also controlled for ethnicity and maintained that fewer people with blood type O tested positive for the virus.

“It is very important to consider the proper control group because blood type prevalence may vary considerably in different ethnic groups and different countries,” said study author Torben Barington, MD, of Odense University Hospital and the University of Southern Denmark. “We have the advantage of a strong control group – Denmark is a small, ethnically homogenous country with a public health system and a central registry for lab data – so our control is population-based, giving our findings a strong foundation.”

BLOOD GROUPS A AND AB ASSOCIATED WITH INCREASED RISK OF SEVERE CLINICAL OUTCOMES OF COVID-19 INFECTION
People with blood groups A or AB appear to exhibit greater COVID-19 disease severity than people with blood groups O or B, according to a separate retrospective study. Researchers examined data from 95 critically ill COVID-19 patients hospitalized in Vancouver, Canada. They found that patients with blood groups A or AB were more likely to require mechanical ventilation, suggesting that they had greater rates of lung injury from COVID-19. They also found more patients with blood group A and AB required dialysis for kidney failure.

Together, these findings suggest that patients in these two blood groups may have an increased risk of organ dysfunction or failure due to COVID-19 than people with blood types O or B. Furthermore, while people with blood types A and AB did not have longer overall hospital stays than those with types O or B, they did remain in the intensive care unit (ICU) for a longer average time, which may also signal a greater COVID-19 severity level.

“The unique part of our study is our focus on the severity effect of blood type on COVID-19. We observed this lung and kidney damage, and in future studies, we will want to tease out the effect of blood group and COVID-19 on other vital organs,” said study author Mypinder S. Sekhon, MD, of the University of British Columbia. “Of particular importance as we continue to traverse the pandemic, we now have a wide range of survivors who are exiting the acute part of COVID-19, but we need to explore mechanisms by which to risk stratify those with longer-term effects.”


https://www.hematology.org/newsroom...possible-link-between-blood-type-and-covid-19
 

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Just talked to FB friend who has virus, she is type A.
 

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O+ here also, been fine all year without being overly cautious. Thank God and maybe my blood also
 

Rebel - KGC

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O-; tested NEGATIVE. Should I donate my blood, to "help" others...? :dontknow: :coffee2:
 

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At this point, any connection to blood type is a correlation at best, not cause and effect. If the correlations were sufficiently convincing by having highly statistically significant differences with high confidence, then they would be worth further investigation. If statistically significant differences (and the UBC study simply has inadequate sample size), then the question should be "why" does one blood type show lower rates or different responses. I'm as skeptical of this correlation as I would be a correlation with eye color or anything else.

There is a danger as well to simple correlations at a time of toxic divisions and demonizations. Some ethnicities have high % of O blood types. It would not be surprising to me one bit to see such casual correlations used inappropriately to deny funding for certain groups - such as native Americans.

Please don't act as though your blood type gives you any level of protection or contagion.
 

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Each of the studies has many limitations - which the authors point out and caution readers. There is no definitive causality (yet).
 

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Again "possible lower risk of infection"
 

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