Publication | Open Access
Plasma Cytokine Atlas Reveals the Importance of TH2 Polarization and Interferons in Predicting COVID-19 Severity and Survival
23
Citations
25
References
2022
Year
Inflammatory Lung DiseaseTh2 RegulationsImmunodeficienciesImmunologyImmune RegulationInnate ImmunityCovid-19 EpidemiologyImmune SystemImmune DysregulationCovid-19InflammationKey Soluble MediatorsInflammatory MarkerSepsisCovid-19 SeverityCovid-19 PandemicChronic InflammationImmune SurveillanceHumoral ImmunityImmune FunctionInflammatory DiseaseTh2 PolarizationCytokinePlasma Cytokine AtlasImmune Cell DevelopmentLactate DehydrogenaseInflammation BiologyMedicineViral Immunity
Although it is now widely accepted that host inflammatory response contributes to COVID-19 immunopathogenesis, the pathways and mechanisms driving disease severity and clinical outcome remain poorly understood. In the effort to identify key soluble mediators that characterize life-threatening COVID-19, we quantified 62 cytokines, chemokines and other factors involved in inflammation and immunity in plasma samples, collected at hospital admission, from 80 hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19 disease who were stratified on the basis of clinical outcome (mechanical ventilation or death by day 28). Our data confirm that age, as well as neutrophilia, lymphocytopenia, procalcitonin, D-dimer and lactate dehydrogenase are strongly associated with the risk of fatal COVID-19. In addition, we found that cytokines related to TH2 regulations (IL-4, IL-13, IL-33), cell metabolism (lep, lep-R) and interferons (IFNα, IFNβ, IFNγ) were also predictive of life-threatening COVID-19.
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