Dear Editor,
Liu et al [1] have presented a comparative review of the three most notable coronaviruses,
namely, SARS-CoV, MERS and SARS-CoV-2 that have been the cause of epidemics in the
21st century. The authors have reported their respective epidemiology and etiology,
the pertinent clinical features, findings of laboratory tests, imaging as well as
treatment options.
While MERS-CoV originated in and was mainly restricted to the Middle East [2], SARS-CoV
spread from Guangdong, China to around 30 countries, lasting for a period of 8 months
[3]. In contrast, SARS-CoV-2 spread like a wildfire from Wuhan, China and has spread
across the world resulting in about 0.776 million deaths and 21.7 million confirmed
cases of COVID-19 as of 17th August 2020 in 188 countries [4].
Bats are considered as the common reservoir for all three types of coronavirus but
the intermediate hosts are different for each of them [5]. For SARS-CoV, raccoons,
civet cats and badgers; for MERS, camels [6] and for SARS CoV-2, pangolins [7], cats
and ferrets [8] serve as the intermediate hosts. Transmission most likely took place
through consumption of meat, milk or serum of the host animal and/or by direct contact
[1]. Nosocomial transmission was the dominant route of transmission for all three
of the viruses; considerable secondary transmission through asymptomatic patients
was also reported [9]. Reproduction factor (R0) for SARS was 3, for MERS 0.8-1.3 [10]
and for SARS-CoV-2 up to 2.5 at the beginning of the epidemic [11]. The timing of
peak viral loads in MERS was during the second week of infection, on the 10th day
in case of SARS-CoV and during the first week for SARS-CoV-2, viral load being higher
in severe cases for all three viruses [12].
The clinical spectrum of all three viral infections is similar with a prodrome of
non-specific symptoms the most frequent being fever and dry cough, followed by muscle
aches, chills and shortness of breath while some patients present with nausea, vomiting
and diarrhea [13]. Severity of Coronavirus infections is greater with older age, and
co-morbidities like diabetes, chronic heart disease, and hypertension. While complicated
cases of SARS and COVID 19 manifested rapid progression to ARDS, severe MERS cases
were more likely to present extra pulmonary organ dysfunction as well as the need
for treatment with vasopressors [13].
To date, only symptomatic support is the mainstay of treatment for all three types
of coronavirus infections. Antibiotics are given to guard against superimposed bacterial
infections or complications. Studies regarding the efficacy of ribavirin, alone or
in combination with interferon or glucocorticoids have reported conflicting results
[14,15]. Remdesivir, although effective against SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV, still lacks
evidence from clinical trials for its effectiveness against COVID 19 [16]. In vitro
experiments report chloroquine effectiveness in the prevention and control of SARS-CoV
infection while randomized controlled trials show hydroxychloroquine effectiveness
in shortening recovery time for COVID 19 pneumonia [17].
Convalescent plasma transfusions have been found effective in improving prognosis
in early stages of SARS with similar results reported in five critically ill patients
with COVID 19. However, risks due to infection transmission to transfusion personnel,
strict criteria for donor selection and limited evidence from Randomized Controlled
Trials restrict its use [18]. A number of vaccines against human MERS, SARS-CoV and
COVID 19 are being developed [19]. The commonest long-term complications of SARS,
MERS and COVID 19 is pulmonary fibrosis in recovering patients [1]. However, SARS-CoV2
being a novel virus, patients may present with other sequelae not yet evident.
Provenance and peer review
Commentary, internally reviewed.
Ethical Approval
Not applicable as all data reported in this work in available in the public domain.
Sources of funding
No funding.
Author contribution
SGSS conceived, planned and under took the study. He identified the relevant literature
and collated data available in the public domain. He synthesised the literature, analysed
data and wrote the manuscript.
Guarantor
Syed Ghulam Sarwar Shah (SGSS).
Declaration of Competing Interest
Author declares no conflict of interest.