Your Genes May Determine Your Covid-19 Risk

What scientists are learning could make a difference in treatment

Emily Mullin
Elemental

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Photo illustration sources (Getty Images): Jonathan Knowles; Andrew Brookes

In the early throes of the coronavirus pandemic, two brothers in the Netherlands fell sick with Covid-19. They were young — 29 and 32 — and previously healthy. But both brothers developed severe symptoms and, at the end of March, were admitted to the intensive care unit. Within days, the older brother couldn’t breathe on his own and needed ventilation. His younger brother came down with an unusually high fever and eventually died from complications of the disease.

A physician took note of the cases and contacted Alexander Hoischen, PhD, a geneticist at Radboud University Medical Center in Nijmegen, who set out to investigate why these brothers were so unusually affected. Sure, it could have been a coincidence, but Hoischen thought it was also possible that the brothers shared a genetic trait that compromised their immune systems.

“If you look at all the men hospitalized from Covid-19, it’s extremely unlikely that that happens to such young individuals, and then it happened twice in the same family,” Hoischen tells Elemental. “That was extremely remarkable to us.”

Days later, a second pair of brothers landed in separate Dutch hospitals. Both men, just 21 and 23 years old, also had…

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Emily Mullin
Elemental

Former staff writer at Medium, where I covered biotech, genetics, and Covid-19 for OneZero, Future Human, Elemental, and the Coronavirus Blog.