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The majority of severe COVID-19 patients develop anti-cardiac autoantibodies

Authors :
Miklós Fagyas
Béla Nagy
Arnold Péter Ráduly
Ivetta Siket Mányiné
Lilla Mártha
Gábor Erdősi
Sándor Sipka
Enikő Enyedi
Attila Ádám Szabó
Zsófia Pólik
János Kappelmayer
Zoltán Papp
Attila Borbély
Tamás Szabó
József Balla
György Balla
Péter Bai
Attila Bácsi
Attila Tóth
Source :
GeroScience.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Severe cases of COVID-19 are characterized by an inflammatory burst, which is accompanied by multiorgan failure. The elderly population has higher risk for severe or fatal outcome for COVID-19. Inflammatory mediators facilitate the immune system to combat viral infection by producing antibodies against viral antigens. Several studies reported that the pro-inflammatory state and tissue damage in COVID-19 also promotes autoimmunity by autoantibody generation. We hypothesized that a subset of these autoantibodies targets cardiac antigens. Here we aimed to detect anti-cardiac autoantibodies in severe COVID-19 patients during hospitalization. For this purpose, 104 COVID-19 patients were recruited, while 40 heart failure patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and 20 patients with severe aortic stenosis served as controls. Patients were tested for anti-cardiac autoantibodies, using human heart homogenate as a bait. Follow-up samples were available in 29 COVID-19 patients. Anti-cardiac autoantibodies were detected in 68% (71 out of 104) of severe COVID-19 patients. Overall, 39% of COVID-19 patients had anti-cardiac IgG autoantibodies, while 51% had anti-cardiac autoantibodies of IgM isotype. Both IgG and IgM anti-cardiac autoantibodies were observed in 22% of cases, and multiple cardiac antigens were targeted in 38% of COVID-19 patients. These anti-cardiac autoantibodies targeted a diverse set of myocardial proteins, without apparent selectivity. As controls, heart failure patients (with dilated cardiomyopathy) had similar occurrence of IgG (45%, p = 0.57) autoantibodies, while significantly lower occurrence of IgM autoantibodies (30%, p = 0.03). Patients with advanced aortic stenosis had significantly lower number of both IgG (11%, p = 0.03) and IgM (10%, p

Subjects

Subjects :
Aging
Geriatrics and Gerontology

Details

ISSN :
25092723
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
GeroScience
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb343b34c45b4eae6793a0acd1b775f1