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Extensive longitudinal immune profiling reveals sustained innate immune activaton in COVID-19 patients with unfavorable outcome

Authors :
Schrijver, B.
Assmann, J.L.J.C.
van Gammeren, A.J.
Vermeulen, R.C.H.
Portengen, L.
Heukels, P.
Langerak, A.W.
Dik, W.A.
van der Velden, V.H.J.
Ermens, T.A.A.M.
IRAS OH Epidemiology Chemical Agents
dIRAS RA-2
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

COVID-19 differs substantially between individuals, ranging from mild to severe or even fatal. Heterogeneity in the immune response against SARS-COV-2 likely contributes to this. Therefore, we explored the temporal dynamics of key cellular and soluble mediators of innate and adaptive immune activation in relation to COVID-19 severity and progression. Forty-four patients with a PCR-proven diagnosis of COVID-19 were included. Extensive cellular (leukocytes and T-lymphocyte subsets) and serological immune profiling (cytokines, soluble cell surface molecules, and SARS-CoV-2 antibodies) was performed at hospital admission and every 3-4 days during hospitalization. Measurements and disease outcome were compared between patients with an unfavorable (IC admission and/or death) and favorable (all others) outcome. Patients with an unfavorable outcome had higher leukocyte numbers at baseline, mostly due to increased neutrophils, whereas lymphocyte and monocyte numbers were reduced. CRP, IL-6, CCL2, CXCL10, and GM-CSF levels were higher at baseline in the unfavorable group, whereas IL-7 levels were lower. SARS-CoV-2 antibodies were more frequently absent in the unfavorable group. Longitudinal analysis revealed delayed kinetics of activated CD4 and CD8 T-lymphocyte subsets in the unfavorable group. Furthermore, whereas CRP, IL-6, CXCL10, andGM-CSF declinedin the favorable group, these cytokines declined with delayed kinetics, remained increased, or even increased further in the unfavorable group. Our data indicate a state of increased innate immune activation in COVID19-patients with an unfavorable outcome at hospital admission, which remained over time, as compared with patients with a favorable outcome.

Subjects

Subjects :
SARS-CoV-2
COVID-19

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od.......101..563e956d18ad70575897742f2c2c0917