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Distinct Patterns of Blood Cytokines Beyond a Cytokine Storm Predict Mortality in COVID-19

Authors :
Christian Herr
Dominic Eisinger
Thomas Volk
Guy Danziger
Sabrina I. Hörsch
Michael Kindermann
Sigrun Smola
Robert Bals
Bahareh Mozafari
Martina Seibert
Florian Custodis
Daniel Grandt
Philipp M. Lepper
Sanjay Kumar Srikakulam
Constantin Marcu
Konrad Schwarzkopf
Rolf Müller
Marcin Krawczyk
Zuhair Wolf Dietrich Ataya
Harald Schäfer
Gudrun Wagenpfeil
Felix Ritzmann
Kai Eltges
Frank Lammert
Katharina Günther
Thimoteus Speer
Marc Mittag
Andreas Keller
Christoph Beisswenger
Thomas Adams
Michael Zemlin
Sebastian Mang
HIPS, Helmholtz-Institut für Pharmazeutische Forschung Saarland, Universitätscampus E8.1 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany.
Source :
Journal of Inflammation Research, Vol Volume 14, Pp 4651-4667 (2021), Journal of inflammation research, New Zealand, Journal of Inflammation Research
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Universität des Saarlandes, 2022.

Abstract

Background COVID-19 comprises several severity stages ranging from oligosymptomatic disease to multi-organ failure and fatal outcomes. The mechanisms why COVID-19 is a mild disease in some patients and progresses to a severe multi-organ and often fatal disease with respiratory failure are not known. Biomarkers that predict the course of disease are urgently needed. The aim of this study was to evaluate a large spectrum of established laboratory measurements. Patients and Methods Patients from the prospective PULMPOHOM and CORSAAR studies were recruited and comprised 35 patients with COVID-19, 23 with conventional pneumonia, and 28 control patients undergoing elective non-pulmonary surgery. Venous blood was used to measure the serum concentrations of 79 proteins by Luminex multiplex immunoassay technology. Distribution of biomarkers between groups and association with disease severity and outcomes were analyzed. Results The biomarker profiles between the three groups differed significantly with elevation of specific proteins specific for the respective conditions. Several biomarkers correlated significantly with disease severity and death. Uniform manifold approximation and projection (UMAP) analysis revealed a significant separation of the three disease groups and separated between survivors and deceased patients. Different models were developed to predict mortality based on the baseline measurements of several protein markers. A score combining IL-1ra, IL-8, IL-10, MCP-1, SCF and CA-9 was associated with significantly higher mortality (AUC 0.929). Discussion Several newly identified blood markers were significantly increased in patients with severe COVID-19 (AAT, EN-RAGE, myoglobin, SAP, TIMP-1, vWF, decorin) or in patients that died (IL-1ra, IL-8, IL-10, MCP-1, SCF, CA-9). The use of established assay technologies allows for rapid translation into clinical practice.<br />Graphical Abstract

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Inflammation Research, Vol Volume 14, Pp 4651-4667 (2021), Journal of inflammation research, New Zealand, Journal of Inflammation Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9eaef46c60e9878a6fb2dc762074139c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.22028/d291-37464