Coronavirus: slight link between blood type O, lower infection risk – Business Insider – Business Insider

  • Early research has revealed a possible link between individuals’ blood type and their coronavirus risk.
  • Several preliminary studies found that people with type O blood have a lower risk of getting the coronavirus, or are less likely to develop a less severe infection if they do get it.
  • But that link is tenuous and shouldn’t be used to judge a patient’s risk: “No one should think they’re protected,” one expert said.
  • Research is split on which blood types are associated with higher risk of coronavirus infection.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

A handful of early studies have found that people with blood type O may have a slight advantage during this pandemic.

Research published over the weekend found that patients with type O were less likely to test positive for COVID-19 than patients with type A, B, or AB blood. 

An April study found a similar trend: The research (though yet to be peer-reviewed) analyzed 1,559 coronavirus patients in New York City and found that a lower proportion had type O blood. 

Other research has reported a link between patients’ blood type and the severity of their infections, but these two studies did not. Overall, the jury is still out on whether your blood type affects your coronavirus risk in any significant way.

“No one should think they’re protected,” Nicholas Tatonetti, the lead author of the April study, told the New York Times

Blood type O is associated ‘with a lower risk of testing positive’

The newest study on blood types examined nearly 1,300 coronavirus patients admitted to five hospitals in Massachusetts in  March and April. The results showed that blood type O “was associated with a lower risk of testing positive,” the researchers said, while types B and AB came with a higher risk. Type A blood had no link to a patient’s chance of a positive diagnosis. 

coronavirus hospital

A hospital employee wearing protective gear shows a cotton swab for taking a coronavirus sample.

Miguel Medina/AFP via Getty


The research aligns with previous findings.

In March, a study of 2,173 coronavirus patients at three hospitals in Wuhan and Shenzhen, China, also found that people with blood type O had a lower risk of infection.

A study published last month in the New England Journal of Medicine found an even more substantive link: Patients in Italy and Spain with blood type O had a 50% reduced risk of severe infection (cases requiring ventilation or supplemental oxygen) compared to patients with other blood types.

More specifically, the study authors found that a region of the participants’ genomes that helps code for blood type was linked to a patient’s chances of developing severe symptoms.

Research is split on whether any blood types are associated with higher risk

blood

Vials containing blood samples.

Phil Noble/Reuters


O is the most common blood type. About 48% of Americans have type O blood, according to the Oklahoma Blood Institute.

In general, your blood type depends on the presence or absence of proteins called A and B antigens on the surface of red blood cells. People with O blood have neither antigen. This genetic trait is inherited from our parents.

The New England Journal of Medicine study found that people with A antigens were 50% more likely to develop severe COVID-19 symptoms like respiratory failure.

Research into whether people with type A blood face a higher risk of getting infected in the first place doesn’t paint a clear picture, however.

The study in China found that patients with blood type A were at higher risk for infection compared to people other blood types. The April research also found that a higher proportion of infected patients studied had blood type A. But the new study found that people with types B and AB had “higher odds of testing positive.” 

A strip running a coronavirus antibody test on a blood samples.

A coronavirus antibody test.

Robin Utretcht/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images


Most researchers agree that it’s too early to tell whether there’s a strong link between blood type and infection risk. 

Dr. Eric Topol, director of the Scripps Research Translational Institute, told the Associated Press last month that the evidence is “tentative … it isn’t enough of a signal to be sure.” 

The link is so tenuous, in fact, that blood type shouldn’t be one of the factors you use to assess your risk, experts say. 

“I wouldn’t even bring it up,” Anahita Dua, a co-author of the new study, told the New York Times

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