1. Distinct cytokine profiles associated with COVID-19 severity and mortality.
- Author
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Dorgham, Karim, Quentric, Paul, Gökkaya, Mehmet, Marot, Stéphane, Parizot, Christophe, Sauce, Delphine, Guihot, Amélie, Luyt, Charles-Edouard, Schmidt, Matthieu, Mayaux, Julien, Beurton, Alexandra, Le Guennec, Loic, Demeret, Sophie, Ben Salah, Elyes, Mathian, Alexis, Yssel, Hans, Combadiere, Béhazine, Combadiere, Christophe, Traidl-Hoffmann, Claudia, and Burrel, Sonia
- Abstract
Markedly elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines and defective type-I interferon responses were reported in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We sought to determine whether particular cytokine profiles are associated with COVID-19 severity and mortality. Cytokine concentrations and severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 antigen were measured at hospital admission in serum of symptomatic patients with COVID-19 (N = 115), classified at hospitalization into 3 respiratory severity groups: no need for mechanical ventilatory support (No-MVS), intermediate severity requiring mechanical ventilatory support (MVS), and critical severity requiring extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Principal-component analysis was used to characterize cytokine profiles associated with severity and mortality. The results were thereafter confirmed in an independent validation cohort (N = 86). At time of hospitalization, ECMO patients presented a dominant proinflammatory response with elevated levels of TNF-α, IL-6, IL-8, and IL-10. In contrast, an elevated type-I interferon response involving IFN-α and IFN-β was characteristic of No-MVS patients, whereas MVS patients exhibited both profiles. Mortality at 1 month was associated with higher levels of proinflammatory cytokines in ECMO patients, higher levels of type-I interferons in No-MVS patients, and their combination in MVS patients, resulting in a combined mortality prediction accuracy of 88.5% (risk ratio, 24.3; P <.0001). Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 antigen levels correlated with type-I interferon levels and were associated with mortality, but not with proinflammatory response or severity. Distinct cytokine profiles are observed in association with COVID-19 severity and are differentially predictive of mortality according to oxygen support modalities. These results warrant personalized treatment of COVID-19 patients based on cytokine profiling. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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