Abstract
During the last two years, treatment of patients with novel coronavirus infection COVID-19 remains an urgent health problem. Interferon proteins are known to play a significant role in antiviral immunity. Some pathological conditions are accompanied by production of neutralizing autologous immunoglobulins against own host interferons (auto-IFN-Abs). There is evidence that autoantibodies against interferons alpha and omega are detected in patients with life-threatening course of COVID-19 pneumonia. The aim of our study was to analyze prevalence of autoantibodies against interferon alpha in patients with COVID-19 coronavirus infection and assess their impact on clinical course of the disease. We examined 70 patients with severe COVID-19, who received inpatient treatment at the intensive care units. Serum autoantibodies against interferon alpha were determined on day 850 after disease onset by using solid-phase enzyme immunoassay (ELISA). Patients were divided into 2 groups: those with and without (group 2) autoantibodies against interferon alpha (group 1). Anti-COVID serum from 57 donors was used a control. Among patients, autoantibodies against interferon alpha were detected in 13 (18%) subjects, which level ranged from 26.8 to 1000 ng/ml. Among donors, auto-IFN-Abs were detected in 5 (8.8%) subjects at trace concentrations (from 1.65 to 12.0 ng/ml). Respiratory failure developed significantly more often in patients with auto-IFN-Abs. While analyzing laboratory parameters, it was noted that the concentration of C-reactive protein was significantly higher in the group of patients with auto-IFN-Abs. Mortality rate of patients with high auto-IFN-Abs levels was 60%. In conclusion, it was found that serum autoantibodies against IFN alpha in COVID-19 patients caused lung damage that significantly more often required hardware respiratory support, so comparable by duration with it for patients without auto-IFN-Abs. High concentrations of auto-IFN-Abs (more than 100 ng/ml) in patients with COVID-19 can be considered as a predictor of unfavorable disease outcome.
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
8 articles.
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