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Prolonged SARS-CoV-2 RNA virus shedding and lymphopenia are hallmarks of COVID-19 in cancer patients with poor prognosis

Authors :
Alain Roulet
Nitharsshini Nirmalathasan
Annabelle Stoclin
Michaela Fontenay
Guy Gorochov
Eric Deutsch
Cléa Melenotte
Lisa Derosa
Gabriel Garcia
Mansouria Merad
Aurelien Marabelle
Benjamin Lelouvier
Eugenie Pizzato
Souad Assaad
Guido Kroemer
Oliver Kepp
Stéphanie Gentile
François-Xavier Danlos
Abdelhakim Ahmed-Belkacem
Jean-Yves Blay
Lydia Meziani
Nadia Saidani
Anne-Gaëlle Goubet
Fanny Pommeret
Carolina Alves Costa Silva
Aymeric Silvin
Bertrand Gachot
Florent Ginhoux
Fabrice Andre
Didier Raoult
Emmanuelle Gallois
Yacine Haddad
Arthur Geraud
Sébastien Cortaredona
Cassandra Thelemaque
Lea Touri
Gladys Ferrere
Sylvère Durand
Emeline Colomba
Corinne Balleyguier
Eric Solary
Bernard La Scola
Damien Drubay
Claudia Grajeda-Iglesias
Frank Griscelli
Anne Florin
Suzanne Kazandjian
Laurence Albiges
Markus Maeurer
Garett Dunsmore
Fabrice Barlesi
Makoto Miyara
Mauro Piacentini
Pierre Ly
Marion Picard
Nathalie Lassau
Caroline Flament
Florian Scotté
Agathe Dubuisson
Giuseppe Ippolito
Safae Terrisse
Jean-Eudes Fahrner
Arielle Elkrief
Bertrand Routy
Marine Mazzenga
Laurence Zitvogel
Caroline Pradon
Imran Lahmar
Jean-Charles Soria
Fanny Aprahamian
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Patients with cancer are at higher risk of severe coronavirus infectious disease 2019 (COVID-19), but the mechanisms underlying virus-host interactions during cancer therapies remain elusive. When comparing nasopharyngeal swabs from cancer and non-cancer patients for RT-qPCR cycle thresholds measuring acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) in 1063 patients (58% with cancer, 89% COVID-19+), we found that malignant disease favors the magnitude and duration of viral RNA shedding concomitant with prolonged serum elevations of type 1 IFN that anticorrelated with anti-RBD IgG antibodies. Chronic viral RNA carriers exhibited the typical immunopathology of severe COVID-19 at the early phase of infection including circulation of immature neutrophils, depletion of non-conventional monocytes and a general lymphopenia that, however, was accompanied by a rise in plasmablasts, activated follicular T helper cells, and non-naive Granzyme B+ FasL+, EomehighTCF-1high, PD-1+CD8+ Tc1 cells. Virus-induced lymphopenia worsened cancer-associated lymphocyte loss, and low lymphocyte counts correlated with chronic SARS-CoV-2 RNA shedding, COVID-19 severity and a higher risk of cancer-related death in the first and second surge of the pandemic. Lymphocyte loss correlated with significant changes in metabolites from the polyamine and biliary salt pathways as well as increased blood DNA from Enterobacteriaceae and Micrococcaceae gut family members in long term viral carriers. We surmise that cancer therapies may exacerbate the paradoxical association between lymphopenia and COVID-19-related immunopathology, and that the prevention of COVID-19-induced lymphocyte loss may reduce cancer-associated death.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........eeccfa88ccb2508d1feb544e4d82bca5