Longitudinal characteristics of lymphocyte responses and cytokine profiles in the peripheral blood of SARS-CoV-2 infected patients

Jing Liu(Union Hospital), Sumeng Li(Union Hospital), Jia Liu(Union Hospital), Boyun Liang(Union Hospital), Xiaobei Wang(Union Hospital), Hua Wang(Union Hospital), Wei Li(Union Hospital), Qiaoxia Tong(Union Hospital), Jianhua Yi(Union Hospital), Lei Zhao(Union Hospital), Lijuan Xiong(Union Hospital), Chunxia Guo(Union Hospital), Jin Tian(Union Hospital), Jinzhuo Luo(Union Hospital), Jinghong Yao(Union Hospital), Ran Pang(Union Hospital), Hui Shen(Union Hospital), Cheng Peng(Union Hospital), Ting Liu(Union Hospital), Qian Zhang(Union Hospital), Jun Wu(Union Hospital), Ling Xu(Union Hospital), Sihong Lu(Union Hospital), Baoju Wang(Union Hospital), Zhihong Weng(Union Hospital), Chunrong Han(Union Hospital), Huabing Zhu(Union Hospital), Ruxia Zhou(Union Hospital), Helong Zhou(Union Hospital), Xiliu Chen(Union Hospital), Pian Ye(Union Hospital), Bin Zhu(Union Hospital), Lu Wang(Union Hospital), Wenqing Zhou(Union Hospital), Shengsong He(Union Hospital), Yongwen He(Union Hospital), Shenghua Jie(Union Hospital), Ping Wei(Union Hospital), Jianao Zhang(Union Hospital), Yinping Lu(Union Hospital), Weixian Wang(Union Hospital), Li Zhang(Union Hospital), Ling Li(Union Hospital), Fengqin Zhou(Union Hospital), Jun Wang(Essen University Hospital), Ulf Dittmer(Essen University Hospital), Mengji Lu(Essen University Hospital), Yu Hu(Union Hospital), Dongliang Yang(Union Hospital), Xin Zheng(Union Hospital)
EBioMedicine
April 18, 2020
Cited by 1,741Open Access
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Abstract

BackgroundThe dynamic changes of lymphocyte subsets and cytokines profiles of patients with novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and their correlation with the disease severity remain unclear.MethodsPeripheral blood samples were longitudinally collected from 40 confirmed COVID-19 patients and examined for lymphocyte subsets by flow cytometry and cytokine profiles by specific immunoassays.FindingsOf the 40 COVID-19 patients enrolled, 13 severe cases showed significant and sustained decreases in lymphocyte counts [0·6 (0·6-0·8)] but increases in neutrophil counts [4·7 (3·6-5·8)] than 27 mild cases [1.1 (0·8-1·4); 2·0 (1·5-2·9)]. Further analysis demonstrated significant decreases in the counts of T cells, especially CD8+ T cells, as well as increases in IL-6, IL-10, IL-2 and IFN-γ levels in the peripheral blood in the severe cases compared to those in the mild cases. T cell counts and cytokine levels in severe COVID-19 patients who survived the disease gradually recovered at later time points to levels that were comparable to those of the mild cases. Moreover, the neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) (AUC=0·93) and neutrophil-to-CD8+ T cell ratio (N8R) (AUC =0·94) were identified as powerful prognostic factors affecting the prognosis for severe COVID-19.InterpretationThe degree of lymphopenia and a proinflammatory cytokine storm is higher in severe COVID-19 patients than in mild cases, and is associated with the disease severity. N8R and NLR may serve as a useful prognostic factor for early identification of severe COVID-19 cases.FundingThe National Natural Science Foundation of China, the National Science and Technology Major Project, the Health Commission of Hubei Province, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, and the Medical Faculty of the University of Duisburg-Essen and Stiftung Universitaetsmedizin, Hospital Essen, Germany.


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