Early and Rapid Identification of COVID-19 Patients with Neutralizing Type I Interferon Auto-antibodies.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
August 2022
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Akbil, Bengisu | |
Meyer, Tim | |
Stubbemann, Paula | |
Thibeault, Charlotte | |
Staudacher, Olga | |
Niemeyer, Daniela | |
Jansen, Jenny | |
Mühlemann, Barbara | |
Doehn, Jan | |
Tabeling, Christoph | |
Nusshag, Christian | |
Sanchez, David Sökler | |
Nieters, Alexandra | |
Lother, Achim | |
Duerschmied, Daniel | |
Schallner, Nils | |
Lieberum, Jan Nikolaus | |
August, Dietrich | |
Rieg, Siegbert | |
Falcone, Valeria | |
Hengel, Hartmut | |
Kölsch, Uwe | |
Unterwalder, Nadine | |
Hübner, Ralf-Harto | |
Jones, Terry C | |
Suttorp, Norbert | |
Drosten, Christian | |
Warnatz, Klaus | |
Dörner, Thomas | |
Sander, Leif Erik | |
Corman, Victor M | |
Merle, Uta | |
Kurth, Florian | |
von Bernuth, Horst | |
Meisel, Christian | |
Goffinet, Christine |
Subject(s)
Series
Journal of clinical immunology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1573-2592
Publisher
Springer
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
35511314
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
PURPOSE
Six to 19% of critically ill COVID-19 patients display circulating auto-antibodies against type I interferons (IFN-AABs). Here, we establish a clinically applicable strategy for early identification of IFN-AAB-positive patients for potential subsequent clinical interventions.
METHODS
We analyzed sera of 430 COVID-19 patients from four hospitals for presence of IFN-AABs by ELISA. Binding specificity and neutralizing activity were evaluated via competition assay and virus-infection-based neutralization assay. We defined clinical parameters associated with IFN-AAB positivity. In a subgroup of critically ill patients, we analyzed effects of therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) on the levels of IFN-AABs, SARS-CoV-2 antibodies and clinical outcome.
RESULTS
The prevalence of neutralizing AABs to IFN-α and IFN-ω in COVID-19 patients from all cohorts was 4.2% (18/430), while being undetectable in an uninfected control cohort. Neutralizing IFN-AABs were detectable exclusively in critically affected (max. WHO score 6-8), predominantly male (83%) patients (7.6%, 18/237 for IFN-α-AABs and 4.6%, 11/237 for IFN-ω-AABs in 237 patients with critical COVID-19). IFN-AABs were present early post-symptom onset and at the peak of disease. Fever and oxygen requirement at hospital admission co-presented with neutralizing IFN-AAB positivity. IFN-AABs were associated with lower probability of survival (7.7% versus 80.9% in patients without IFN-AABs). TPE reduced levels of IFN-AABs in three of five patients and may increase survival of IFN-AAB-positive patients compared to those not undergoing TPE.
CONCLUSION
IFN-AABs may serve as early biomarker for the development of severe COVID-19. We propose to implement routine screening of hospitalized COVID-19 patients for rapid identification of patients with IFN-AABs who most likely benefit from specific therapies.
Six to 19% of critically ill COVID-19 patients display circulating auto-antibodies against type I interferons (IFN-AABs). Here, we establish a clinically applicable strategy for early identification of IFN-AAB-positive patients for potential subsequent clinical interventions.
METHODS
We analyzed sera of 430 COVID-19 patients from four hospitals for presence of IFN-AABs by ELISA. Binding specificity and neutralizing activity were evaluated via competition assay and virus-infection-based neutralization assay. We defined clinical parameters associated with IFN-AAB positivity. In a subgroup of critically ill patients, we analyzed effects of therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) on the levels of IFN-AABs, SARS-CoV-2 antibodies and clinical outcome.
RESULTS
The prevalence of neutralizing AABs to IFN-α and IFN-ω in COVID-19 patients from all cohorts was 4.2% (18/430), while being undetectable in an uninfected control cohort. Neutralizing IFN-AABs were detectable exclusively in critically affected (max. WHO score 6-8), predominantly male (83%) patients (7.6%, 18/237 for IFN-α-AABs and 4.6%, 11/237 for IFN-ω-AABs in 237 patients with critical COVID-19). IFN-AABs were present early post-symptom onset and at the peak of disease. Fever and oxygen requirement at hospital admission co-presented with neutralizing IFN-AAB positivity. IFN-AABs were associated with lower probability of survival (7.7% versus 80.9% in patients without IFN-AABs). TPE reduced levels of IFN-AABs in three of five patients and may increase survival of IFN-AAB-positive patients compared to those not undergoing TPE.
CONCLUSION
IFN-AABs may serve as early biomarker for the development of severe COVID-19. We propose to implement routine screening of hospitalized COVID-19 patients for rapid identification of patients with IFN-AABs who most likely benefit from specific therapies.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| s10875-022-01252-2.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 1.65 MB | published |