Distinct pulmonary and systemic effects of dexamethasone in severe COVID-19

Author:

Neyton Lucile P. A.ORCID,Patel Ravi K.ORCID,Sarma AartikORCID,Ansel K. Mark,Christenson Stephanie,Adkisson Michael,Eckalbar Walter,Maliskova Lenka,Schroeder Andrew,Bueno Raymund,Gordon Gracie,Hartoularos George,Kushnoor Divya,Lee David,McCarthy Elizabeth,Ogorodnikov Anton,Spitzer Matthew,Hiam Kamir,Song Yun S.,Sun Yang,Tumurbaatar Erden,van der Wijst Monique,Whatley Alexander,Jones Chayse,Caldera Saharai,DeVoe Catherine,Serpa Paula Hayakawa,Love Christina,Mick Eran,Phelps Maira,Tsitsiklis Alexandra,Leroux Carolyn,Rashid Sadeed,Rodriguez Nicklaus,Tang Kevin,Altamirano Luz Torres,Leligdowicz Aleksandra,Matthay Michael,Wilson Michael,Ye Jimmie,Chak Suzanna,Ghale Rajani,Jauregui Alejandra,Lee Deanna,Nguyen Viet,Sigman Austin,Kangelaris Kirsten N.,Asthana Saurabh,Collins Zachary,Patel Ravi,Rao Arjun,Samad Bushra,Shaw Cole,Lea Tasha,Ward Alyssa,Jones Norman,Milush Jeff,Chan Vincent,Chew Nayvin,Combes Alexis,Courau Tristan,Hu Kenneth,Huang Billy,Kumar Nitasha,Mahboob Salman,Muñoz-Sandoval Priscila,Parada Randy,Reeder Gabriella,Shen Alan,Tsui Jessica,Zha Shoshana,Zhu Wandi S.,Willmore Andrew,Haller Sidney C.,Kangelaris Kirsten N.,Eckalbar Walter L.,Erle David J.ORCID,Krummel Matthew F.ORCID,Hendrickson Carolyn M.ORCID,Woodruff Prescott G.,Langelier Charles R.ORCID,Calfee Carolyn S.,Fragiadakis Gabriela K.ORCID,

Abstract

AbstractDexamethasone is the standard of care for critically ill patients with COVID-19, but the mechanisms by which it decreases mortality and its immunological effects in this setting are not understood. Here we perform bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing of samples from the lower respiratory tract and blood, and assess plasma cytokine profiling to study the effects of dexamethasone on both systemic and pulmonary immune cell compartments. In blood samples, dexamethasone is associated with decreased expression of genes associated with T cell activation, including TNFSFR4 and IL21R. We also identify decreased expression of several immune pathways, including major histocompatibility complex-II signaling, selectin P ligand signaling, and T cell recruitment by intercellular adhesion molecule and integrin activation, suggesting these are potential mechanisms of the therapeutic benefit of steroids in COVID-19. We identify additional compartment- and cell- specific differences in the effect of dexamethasone that are reproducible in publicly available datasets, including steroid-resistant interferon pathway expression in the respiratory tract, which may be additional therapeutic targets. In summary, we demonstrate compartment-specific effects of dexamethasone in critically ill COVID-19 patients, providing mechanistic insights with potential therapeutic relevance. Our results highlight the importance of studying compartmentalized inflammation in critically ill patients.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | National Institutes of Health

Genentech

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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