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Prolonged T-cell activation and long COVID symptoms independently associate with severe COVID-19 at 3 months.

Marianna SantopaoloMichaela GregorovaFergus HamiltonDavid ArnoldAnna LongAurora LaceyAlice HallidayHolly E BaumKristy HamiltonRachel MilliganElizabeth OliverOlivia PearceLea KnezevicBegonia Morales AzaAlice MilneEmily MilodowskiEben JonesRajeka LazarusAnu GoenkaAdam FinnNicholas MaskellAndrew D DavidsonKathleen GillespieLinda WooldridgeLaura Rivino
Published in: eLife (2023)
COVID-19 causes immune perturbations which may persist long-term, and patients frequently report ongoing symptoms for months after recovery. We assessed immune activation at 3-12 months post hospital admission in 187 samples from 63 patients with mild, moderate or severe disease and investigated whether it associates with long COVID. At 3 months, patients with severe disease displayed persistent activation of CD4 + and CD8 + T-cells, based on expression of HLA-DR, CD38, Ki67 and granzyme B, and elevated plasma levels of IL-4, IL-7, IL-17 and TNF-α compared to mild and/or moderate patients. Plasma from severe patients at 3 months caused T-cells from healthy donors to upregulate IL-15Rα, suggesting that plasma factors in severe patients may increase T-cell responsiveness to IL-15-driven bystander activation. Patients with severe disease reported a higher number of long COVID symptoms which did not however, correlate with cellular immune activation/pro-inflammatory cytokines after adjusting for age, sex and disease severity. Our data suggests that long COVID and persistent immune activation may correlate independently with severe disease.
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