COVID-19 and immunological regulations - from basic and translational aspects to clinical implications.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
August 2020
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Schön, Michael P | |
Berking, Carola | |
Biedermann, Tilo | |
Buhl, Timo | |
Erpenbeck, Luise | |
Eyerich, Kilian | |
Eyerich, Stefanie | |
Ghoreschi, Kamran | |
Goebeler, Matthias | |
Ludwig, Ralf J | |
Schäkel, Knut | |
Schilling, Bastian | |
Stary, Georg | |
von Stebut, Esther | |
Steinbrink, Kerstin |
Subject(s)
Series
Journal of the German Society of Dermatology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1610-0387
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
32761894
Description
The COVID-19 pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 has far-reaching direct and indirect medical consequences. These include both the course and treatment of diseases. It is becoming increasingly clear that infections with SARS-CoV-2 can cause considerable immunological alterations, which particularly also affect pathogenetically and/or therapeutically relevant factors. Against this background we summarize here the current state of knowledge on the interaction of SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19 with mediators of the acute phase of inflammation (TNF, IL-1, IL-6), type 1 and type 17 immune responses (IL-12, IL-23, IL-17, IL-36), type 2 immune reactions (IL-4, IL-13, IL-5, IL-31, IgE), B-cell immunity, checkpoint regulators (PD-1, PD-L1, CTLA4), and orally druggable signaling pathways (JAK, PDE4, calcineurin). In addition, we discuss in this context non-specific immune modulation by glucocorticosteroids, methotrexate, antimalarial drugs, azathioprine, dapsone, mycophenolate mofetil and fumaric acid esters, as well as neutrophil granulocyte-mediated innate immune mechanisms. From these recent findings we derive possible implications for the therapeutic modulation of said immunological mechanisms in connection with SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19. Although, of course, the greatest care should be taken with patients with immunologically mediated diseases or immunomodulating therapies, it appears that many treatments can also be carried out during the COVID-19 pandemic; some even appear to alleviate COVID-19.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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ddg.14169.pdf | Adobe PDF | 460.79 KB | Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) | published |