| Literature DB >> 33232303 |
Michael S Abers1, Ottavia M Delmonte1, Emily E Ricotta1, Jonathan Fintzi2, Danielle L Fink3, Adriana A Almeida de Jesus1, Kol A Zarember1, Sara Alehashemi1, Vasileios Oikonomou1, Jigar V Desai1, Scott W Canna4, Bita Shakoory1, Kerry Dobbs1, Luisa Imberti5, Alessandra Sottini5, Eugenia Quiros-Roldan6, Francesco Castelli6, Camillo Rossi7, Duilio Brugnoni8, Andrea Biondi9, Laura Rachele Bettini9, Mariella D'Angio'9, Paolo Bonfanti10, Riccardo Castagnoli11, Daniela Montagna12,13, Amelia Licari11, Gian Luigi Marseglia11, Emily F Gliniewicz1, Elana Shaw1, Dana E Kahle1, Andre T Rastegar1, Michael Stack1, Katherine Myint-Hpu1, Susan L Levinson14, Mark J DiNubile14, Daniel W Chertow15, Peter D Burbelo16, Jeffrey I Cohen17, Katherine R Calvo18, John S Tsang19,20, Helen C Su1, John I Gallin1, Douglas B Kuhns3, Raphaela Goldbach-Mansky1, Michail S Lionakis1, Luigi D Notarangelo1.
Abstract
Immune and inflammatory responses to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) contribute to disease severity of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). However, the utility of specific immune-based biomarkers to predict clinical outcome remains elusive. Here, we analyzed levels of 66 soluble biomarkers in 175 Italian patients with COVID-19 ranging from mild/moderate to critical severity and assessed type I IFN-, type II IFN-, and NF-κB-dependent whole-blood transcriptional signatures. A broad inflammatory signature was observed, implicating activation of various immune and nonhematopoietic cell subsets. Discordance between IFN-α2a protein and IFNA2 transcript levels in blood suggests that type I IFNs during COVID-19 may be primarily produced by tissue-resident cells. Multivariable analysis of patients' first samples revealed 12 biomarkers (CCL2, IL-15, soluble ST2 [sST2], NGAL, sTNFRSF1A, ferritin, IL-6, S100A9, MMP-9, IL-2, sVEGFR1, IL-10) that when increased were independently associated with mortality. Multivariate analyses of longitudinal biomarker trajectories identified 8 of the aforementioned biomarkers (IL-15, IL-2, NGAL, CCL2, MMP-9, sTNFRSF1A, sST2, IL-10) and 2 additional biomarkers (lactoferrin, CXCL9) that were substantially associated with mortality when increased, while IL-1α was associated with mortality when decreased. Among these, sST2, sTNFRSF1A, IL-10, and IL-15 were consistently higher throughout the hospitalization in patients who died versus those who recovered, suggesting that these biomarkers may provide an early warning of eventual disease outcome.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Chemokines; Cytokines; Immunology
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33232303 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.144455
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708