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11 Apr 2022

CUHK researchers discover distinct gut microbial signatures for prediction, diagnosis and treatment of long COVID

11 Apr 2022

For the first time, clinical researchers from CU Medicine have identified distinct gut microbiome profiles associated with long COVID. These distinct gut microbial signatures can be used to predict the risk of developing long COVID and diagnose long COVID in patients with persistent symptoms after the acute infection.

(From left) Professor Siew NG, Associate Director of the Centre for Gut Microbiota Research; Professor Francis CHAN, Dean of Medicine and Director of the Centre for Gut Microbiota Research; and Professor Martin WONG, Professor from The Jockey Club School of Public Health and Primary Care, at CU Medicine.

Clinical researchers from The Chinese University of Hong Kong’s (CUHK) Faculty of Medicine (CU Medicine) have identified for the first time distinct gut microbiome profiles associated with post-acute COVID-19 syndrome, more commonly known as “long COVID”. These distinct gut microbial signatures can be used to predict the risk of developing long COVID and diagnose long COVID in patients with persistent symptoms after the acute infection. This is the world’s first study to demonstrate the gut microbiota as a key determinant of long COVID. Study results have been published in the international journal Gut.  

In a pilot study, the team has also shown that a novel gut microbiome immunity formula (SIM01) developed by CUHK can prevent the development of long COVID. CU Medicine is now conducting a randomised clinical trial using the SIM01 formula to modulate patients’ gut microbiota to prevent and treat long COVID.

What is “long COVID”?

Long COVID is defined as the presence of persistent symptoms, such as fatigue, poor memory, difficulty in sleeping or breathing and hair loss, for four weeks or more after clearance of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. According to a study by CU Medicine, about 80% of patients had long COVID six months after recovering from COVID-19.

Patients with long COVID have distinct gut microbiome composition

Diagnosis of long COVID is often delayed because symptoms are non-specific and there is no specific test to explain long COVID symptoms. The development of non-invasive, microbiome-based profiling will be a useful tool for timely detection of long COVID.

Based on metagenomics analysis of serial stool samples of over 100 patients, the team identified distinct gut microbiome profile for long COVID. It was found that different subtypes of long COVID had specific patterns of gut microbiome profile. For example, a lack of the “friendly” immunity-boosting bacteria is strongly associated with persistent respiratory symptoms such as cough or shortness of breath, whereas an abundance of certain pathogens is linked to fatigue and neuropsychiatric symptoms including difficulty in sleeping, poor memory and loss of taste. By using a machine-learning model with over 1,200 clinical samples, the team can accurately predict and detect long COVID-associated microbiome with over 90% sensitivity and specificity.

Detecting distinct gut microbiome profile associated with long COVID has three major clinical applications, namely, a prediction tool for long COVID with 90% of accuracy; as a diagnostic tool for suspected long COVID with both sensitivity and specificity about 90%; and as a treatment guide for long COVID.

The gut microbiome test for long COVID is an innovative technology of the Microbiota I-Center (MagIC) funded by InnoHK, an initiative of the HKSAR Government’s Innovation and Technology Commission. CUHK Medical Centre will be the first in Hong Kong to provide this innovative test.

Over 90% of patients who received SIM01 did not develop long COVID

Treating long COVID is challenging given that, until recently, there has been no definitive clinical test for diagnosis, and there is no standard treatment yet. A recent pilot study conducted by the research team showed that in patients who received CUHK’s microbiome immunity formula SIM01 for four weeks, over 90% of them did not develop long COVID up to a year of follow-up.

Professor Francis KL CHAN, Dean of Medicine and Director of the Centre for Gut Microbiota Research at CU Medicine, remarked, “Since the outbreak of COVID-19 in 2020, more than 500 million people worldwide have been infected. Our results showed that almost 80% of our local patients suffer from long COVID. Our discovery not only offers a scientific explanation for long COVID for the first time, but also provides an effective tool for prediction, diagnosis and treatment of this global health problem.”

Professor Siew Chien NG, Associate Director of the Centre for Gut Microbiota Research at CU Medicine, added, “Our study showed that microbiome-based profiling is potentially useful for risk assessment, timely diagnosis and targeted treatment of long COVID. These new findings also indicate that in addition to hastening recovery from acute COVID-19 infection, a microbiome immunity formula (SIM01) is potentially effective in preventing long COVID.”

CU Medicine conducts a large-scale study to evaluate the effectiveness of SIM01 for long COVID

CU Medicine has started a large-scale randomised clinical trial to study the efficacy of SIM01 in preventing and treating long COVID. Professor Martin Chi Sang WONG, Professor from The Jockey Club School of Public Health and Primary Care at CU Medicine, said, “We are currently recruiting recovered COVID-19 patients who have persistent symptoms into a clinical trial that aims to reduce long COVID by modulating their gut microbiota.” This study is supported by the Food and Health Bureau’s Health and Medical Research Fund.

For those who are interested, please register at https://bit.ly/3r5KEgK  or send a WhatsApp message “To join the RECOVERY study” to 5641 7082.



For the first time, clinical researchers from CU Medicine have identified distinct gut microbiome profiles associated with long COVID. These distinct gut microbial signatures can be used to predict the risk of developing long COVID and diagnose long COVID in patients with persistent symptoms after the acute infection.<br />
<br />
(From left) Professor Siew NG, Associate Director of the Centre for Gut Microbiota Research; Professor Francis CHAN, Dean of Medicine and Director of the Centre for Gut Microbiota Research; and Professor Martin WONG, Professor from The Jockey Club School of Public Health and Primary Care, at CU Medicine.

For the first time, clinical researchers from CU Medicine have identified distinct gut microbiome profiles associated with long COVID. These distinct gut microbial signatures can be used to predict the risk of developing long COVID and diagnose long COVID in patients with persistent symptoms after the acute infection.

(From left) Professor Siew NG, Associate Director of the Centre for Gut Microbiota Research; Professor Francis CHAN, Dean of Medicine and Director of the Centre for Gut Microbiota Research; and Professor Martin WONG, Professor from The Jockey Club School of Public Health and Primary Care, at CU Medicine.

 

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