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Changes in inflammatory and immune drivers in response to immunomodulatory therapies in COVID-19

Authors :
Hyung J. Chun
Matthew L Meizlish
C-Hong Chang
Henry M. Rinder
Stephen Y Wang
Alfred Ian Lee
Parveen Bahel
Source :
medRxiv, article-version (status) pre, article-version (number) 1
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

As the global community strives to discover effective therapies for COVID-19, immunomodulatory strategies have emerged as a leading contender to combat the cytokine storm and improve clinical outcomes in patients with severe disease. Systemic corticosteroids and selective cytokine inhibitory agents have been utilized both as empiric therapies and in clinical trials. While multiple randomized, placebo controlled trials have now demonstrated that corticosteroids improve survival in patients with COVID-19,1, 2 IL-6 inhibition, which gained significant early interest based on observational studies, has not demonstrated reliable efficacy in randomized, placebo controlled trials.3, 4 To better understand the mechanistic basis of immunomodulatory therapies being implemented for treatment of COVID-19, we assessed longitudinal biochemical changes in response to such approaches in hospitalized patients with COVID-19. We demonstrate broad suppression of multiple immunomodulatory factors associated with adverse clinical outcomes in COVID-19 in patients who received corticosteroids, but no such response was seen in patients who either received tocilizumab or no immunomodulatory therapy. Our findings provide early insights into molecular signatures that correlate with immunomodulatory therapies in COVID-19 which may be useful in understanding clinical outcomes in future studies of larger patient cohorts.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
medRxiv, article-version (status) pre, article-version (number) 1
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fbb5e977b8124a91da359ad3faa66139
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.12.23.20248547