The influence of helminth immune regulation on covid-19 clinical outcomes: Is it beneficial or detrimental?

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Abstract

Immunologically, chronic worm infections prevent themselves from strong immune responses by skewing the host response towards a T helper 2 (Th2) type. The regulatory response initiated by helminth infections is supposed to temper responses to non-helminth antigens including viral infections which will, in turn, alter the clinical outcomes of infections. In view of this, recent reports highlighted the possible negative associations of severe COVID-19 and helminth co-infections in helminth-endemic regions. As the pathology of COVID-19 is primarily mediated by an excessive immune response and subsequent cytokine storm, which contributes to the poor prognosis of COVID-19, helminth-driven immune modulation will hypothetically contribute to the less severe outcomes of COVID-19. Nevertheless, emerging reports also stated that COVID-19 and helminth co-infections may have more hidden outcomes than predictable ones. Herein, the current knowledge on the interaction of COVID-19 and helminth co-infections will be discussed.

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Ademe, M., & Girma, F. (2021). The influence of helminth immune regulation on covid-19 clinical outcomes: Is it beneficial or detrimental? Infection and Drug Resistance. Dove Medical Press Ltd. https://doi.org/10.2147/IDR.S335447

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