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Comparative immune profiling of acute respiratory distress syndrome patients with or without SARS-CoV-2 infection

28

Citations

59

References

2021

Year

Abstract

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is the main complication of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), requiring admission to the intensive care unit (ICU). Despite extensive immune profiling of COVID-19 patients, to what extent COVID-19-associated ARDS differs from other causes of ARDS remains unknown. To address this question, here, we build 3 cohorts of patients categorized in COVID-19<sup>-</sup>ARDS<sup>+</sup>, COVID-19<sup>+</sup>ARDS<sup>+</sup>, and COVID-19<sup>+</sup>ARDS<sup>-</sup>, and compare, by high-dimensional mass cytometry, their immune landscape. A cell signature associating S100A9/calprotectin-producing CD169<sup>+</sup> monocytes, plasmablasts, and Th1 cells is found in COVID-19<sup>+</sup>ARDS<sup>+</sup>, unlike COVID-19<sup>-</sup>ARDS<sup>+</sup> patients. Moreover, this signature is essentially shared with COVID-19<sup>+</sup>ARDS<sup>-</sup> patients, suggesting that severe COVID-19 patients, whether or not they experience ARDS, display similar immune profiles. We show an increase in CD14<sup>+</sup>HLA-DR<sup>low</sup> and CD14<sup>low</sup>CD16<sup>+</sup> monocytes correlating to the occurrence of adverse events during the ICU stay. We demonstrate that COVID-19-associated ARDS displays a specific immune profile and may benefit from personalized therapy in addition to standard ARDS management.

References

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