Literature DB >> 34174793

Interleukin-21: A Potential Biomarker For Diagnosis and Predicting Prognosis in COVID-19 Patients.

Nilüfer Aylin Acet Öztürk, Ahmet Ursavaş, Asli Görek Dilektaşli, Ezgi Demirdöğen, Necmiye Funda Coşkun, Dane Ediger, Ayşe Esra Uzaslan, Diğdem Yöyen Ermiş, Mert Karaca, Orkun Eray Terzi, Merve Bayram, Dilara Ömer Topçu, Büşra Yiğitliler, Ahmet Yurttaş, Shahriyar Maharramov, Gamze Yazici, Haluk Barbaros Oral, Mehmet Karadağ.   

Abstract

Interleukin-21: A Potential Biomarker For Diagnosis and Predicting Prognosis in COVID-19 Patients Abstract Introduction COVID-19 patients have a wide spectrum of disease severity. Several biomarkers were evaluated as predictors for progression towards severe disease. IL-21 is a member of common ?-chain cytokine family and creates some specific effects during programming and maintenance of antiviral immunity. We aimed to assess IL-21 as a biomarker for diagnosis and outcome prediction in patients hospitalized with COVID-19. Method Patients with a preliminary diagnosis of COVID-19 and pneumonia other than COVID-19 admitted to a tertiary care hospital were included consecutively in this comparative study. Results The study population consisted of 51 patients with COVID-19 and 11 patients with non-COVID-19 pneumonia. Serum IL-21 concentration was markedly higher and serum CRP concentration was significantly lower in COVID-19 patients compared to non-COVID-19 pneumonia patients. Within COVID-19 patients 10 patients showed radiological and clinical progression. Patients with clinical worsening had lower lymphocyte count and haemoglobin. In addition to that deteriorating patients had higher urea, LDH levels and elevated concentration of both IL-6 and IL-21. The cut-off value of 106 ng/L for IL-21 has 80.0% sensitivity, %60.9 specificity for discriminating patients with clinical worsening. Multivariable analysis performed to define risk factors for disease progression identified IL-6 and IL-21 as independent predictors. Odds ratio for serum IL-6 concentrations ? 3.2 pg/mL was 8.07 (95% CI: 1.37-47.50, p=0.04) and odds ratio for serum IL-21 concentrations ? 106 ng/L was 6.24 (95% CI: 1.04 ? 37.3, p=0.02). Conclusion We identified specific differences in serum IL-21 between COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 pneumonia patients. Serum IL-21 measurement has promising predictive value for disease progression in COVID-19 patients. High serum IL-6 and IL-21 levels obtained upon admission are independent risk factors for clinical worsening.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COVID-19; Interleukin 21; Prognosis

Year:  2021        PMID: 34174793     DOI: 10.3906/sag-2102-24

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Turk J Med Sci        ISSN: 1300-0144            Impact factor:   0.973


  3 in total

Review 1.  COVID-19 pandemic: the delta variant, T-cell responses, and the efficacy of developing vaccines.

Authors:  Shagnik Chattopadhyay; Sayantee Hazra; Arman Kunwar Hansda; Biswajit Biswas; Ritobrata Goswami
Journal:  Inflamm Res       Date:  2022-03-15       Impact factor: 6.986

Review 2.  Cytokines and microRNAs in SARS-CoV-2: What do we know?

Authors:  Fahimeh Zamani Rarani; Bahman Rashidi; Mohammad Hassan Jafari Najaf Abadi; Michael R Hamblin; Seyed Mohammad Reza Hashemian; Hamed Mirzaei
Journal:  Mol Ther Nucleic Acids       Date:  2022-06-25       Impact factor: 10.183

3.  SARS-CoV-2 infection drives an inflammatory response in human adipose tissue through infection of adipocytes and macrophages.

Authors:  Giovanny J Martínez-Colón; Kalani Ratnasiri; Heping Chen; Sizun Jiang; Elizabeth Zanley; Arjun Rustagi; Renu Verma; Han Chen; Jason R Andrews; Kirsten D Mertz; Alexandar Tzankov; Dan Azagury; Jack Boyd; Garry P Nolan; Christian M Schürch; Matthias S Matter; Catherine A Blish; Tracey L McLaughlin
Journal:  Sci Transl Med       Date:  2022-09-22       Impact factor: 19.319

  3 in total

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