Persistent immune abnormalities discriminate post-COVID syndrome from convalescence

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Abstract

Background: Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are key organizers of tissue immune responses and regulate tissue development, repair, and pathology. Persistent clinical sequelae beyond 12 weeks following acute COVID-19 disease, named post-COVID syndrome (PCS), are increasingly recognized in convalescent individuals. ILCs have been associated with the severity of COVID-19 symptoms but their role in the development of PCS remains poorly defined. Methods and results: Here, we used multiparametric immune phenotyping, finding expanded circulating ILC precursors (ILCPs) and concurrent decreased group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) in PCS patients compared to well-matched convalescent control groups at > 3 months after infection or healthy controls. Patients with PCS showed elevated expression of chemokines and cytokines associated with trafficking of immune cells (CCL19/MIP-3b, FLT3-ligand), endothelial inflammation and repair (CXCL1, EGF, RANTES, IL-1RA, PDGF-AA). Conclusion: These results define immunological parameters associated with PCS and might help find biomarkers and disease-relevant therapeutic strategies.

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Sbierski-Kind, J., Schlickeiser, S., Feldmann, S., Ober, V., Grüner, E., Pleimelding, C., … Roider, J. (2024). Persistent immune abnormalities discriminate post-COVID syndrome from convalescence. Infection, 52(3), 1087–1097. https://doi.org/10.1007/s15010-023-02164-y

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