Abstract

Identifying immune correlates of COVID-19 disease severity is an urgent need for clinical management, vaccine evaluation, and drug development. Here, we present a temporal analysis of key immune mediators, cytokines, and chemokines in blood of hospitalized COVID-19 patients from serial sampling and follow-up over 4 weeks. A total of 71 patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 admitted to Beijing You'an Hospital in China with either mild (53 patients) or severe (18 patients) disease were enrolled with 18 healthy volunteers. We measured 34 immune mediators, cytokines, and chemokines in peripheral blood every 4-7 days over 1 month per patient using a bioplex multiplex immunoassay. We found that the chemokine RANTES (CCL5) was significantly elevated, from an early stage of the infection, in patients with mild but not severe disease. We also found that early production of inhibitory mediators including IL-10 and IL-1RA were significantly associated with disease severity, and a combination of CCL5, IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA), and IL-10 at week 1 may predict patient outcomes. The majority of cytokines that are known to be associated with the cytokine storm in virus infections such as IL-6 and IFN-γ were only significantly elevated in the late stage of severe COVID-19 illness. TNF-α and GM-CSF showed no significant differences between severe and mild cases. Together, our data suggest that early intervention to increase expression of CCL5 may prevent patients from developing severe illness. Our data also suggest that measurement of levels of CCL5, as well as IL-1RA and IL-10 in blood individually and in combination, might be useful prognostic biomarkers to guide treatment strategies.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 infection has been declared a global pandemic by the WHO, with 1,439,516 confirmed cases over 212 countries by April 10, 2020 [1]

  • We found that the chemokine RANTES (CCL5) was significantly elevated, from an early stage of the infection, in patients with mild but not severe disease

  • We found that early production of inhibitory mediators including IL-10 and IL-1RA were significantly associated with disease severity, and a combination of CCL5, IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA), and IL-10 at week 1 may predict patient outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

COVID-19 infection has been declared a global pandemic by the WHO, with 1,439,516 confirmed cases over 212 countries by April 10, 2020 [1]. Severe infections are characterized by rapid progression to acute respiratory distress syndrome, septic shock, refractory metabolic acidosis, coagulation disorders, multiorgan failure, and death [6] It is unclear why only a small proportion of patients develop severe illness, but it has been suggested that this relates to both an overreactive adaptive immune response and viral-induced lung pathology [7, 8]. Recent clinical studies found that patients with severe illness had lower levels of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and higher levels of plasma IL-6 and IL-10 compared with patients with mild illness [7, 9] This combination was associated with reduced patient survival, suggesting that these cytokines may have an important role in viral pathogenesis [10]. We present a temporal analysis of key immune mediators, cytokines, and chemokines in blood of hospitalized COVID-19 patients from serial sampling and follow-up over 4 weeks

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