1. NETosis induction reflects COVID-19 severity and long COVID: insights from a 2-center patient cohort study in Israel.
- Author
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Krinsky N, Sizikov S, Nissim S, Dror A, Sas A, Prinz H, Pri-Or E, Perek S, Raz-Pasteur A, Lejbkowicz I, Cohen-Matsliah SI, Almog R, Chen N, Kurd R, Jarjou'i A, Rokach A, Ben-Chetrit E, Schroeder A, Caulin AF, Yost CC, Schiffman JD, Goldfeder M, and Martinod K
- Subjects
- Humans, Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome, Israel, Neutrophils, Cohort Studies, DNA, COVID-19, Extracellular Traps
- Abstract
Background: COVID-19 severity and its late complications continue to be poorly understood. Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) form in acute COVID-19, likely contributing to morbidity and mortality., Objectives: This study evaluated immunothrombosis markers in a comprehensive cohort of acute and recovered COVID-19 patients, including the association of NETs with long COVID., Methods: One-hundred-seventy-seven patients were recruited from clinical cohorts at 2 Israeli centers: acute COVID-19 (mild/moderate, severe/critical), convalescent COVID-19 (recovered and long COVID), along with 54 non-COVID controls. Plasma was examined for markers of platelet activation, coagulation, and NETs. Ex vivo NETosis induction capability was evaluated after neutrophil incubation with patient plasma., Results: Soluble P-selectin, factor VIII, von Willebrand factor, and platelet factor 4 were significantly elevated in patients with COVID-19 versus controls. Myeloperoxidase (MPO)-DNA complex levels were increased only in severe COVID-19 and did not differentiate between COVID-19 severities or correlate with thrombotic markers. NETosis induction levels strongly correlated with illness severity/duration, platelet activation markers, and coagulation factors, and were significantly reduced upon dexamethasone treatment and recovery. Patients with long COVID maintained higher NETosis induction, but not NET fragments, compared to recovered convalescent patients., Conclusions: Increased NETosis induction can be detected in patients with long COVID. NETosis induction appears to be a more sensitive NET measurement than MPO-DNA levels in COVID-19, differentiating between disease severity and patients with long COVID. Ongoing NETosis induction capability in long COVID may provide insights into pathogenesis and serve as a surrogate marker for persistent pathology. This study emphasizes the need to explore neutrophil-targeted therapies in acute and chronic COVID-19., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interests N.K., S.S., S.N., A.D., A.S., H.P., E.P., A.F.C., J.D.S., and M.G. are current or former employees of Peel Therapeutics and hold share options in the company. K.M. and A.S. received consulting fees for scientific advice to Peel Therapeutics and hold stock options in the company. C.C.Y. authors a US patent (patent no. 10,232,023 B2) held by the University of Utah for the use of NET-inhibitory peptides for the "treatment of and prophylaxis against inflammatory disorders," for which Peel Therapeutics, Inc. holds the exclusive license. C.C.Y. and J.D.S. are co-inventors on patent application WO2021226111A1 for NET-inhibitory peptides to treat and prevent immunothrombosis in COVID-19 acute respiratory distress syndrome. S.P., A.R.P, I.L., S.I.C.M., R.A., N.C., R.K., A.J., A.R. and E.B. have no conflicts of interest to declare., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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