Biomedicines (Oct 2021)

A Short Corticosteroid Course Reduces Symptoms and Immunological Alterations Underlying Long-COVID

  • Alberto Utrero-Rico,
  • María Ruiz-Ruigómez,
  • Rocío Laguna-Goya,
  • Estíbaliz Arrieta-Ortubay,
  • Marta Chivite-Lacaba,
  • Cecilia González-Cuadrado,
  • Antonio Lalueza,
  • Patricia Almendro-Vazquez,
  • Antonio Serrano,
  • José María Aguado,
  • Carlos Lumbreras,
  • Estela Paz-Artal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines9111540
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. 1540

Abstract

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Despite the growing number of patients with persistent symptoms after acute SARS-CoV-2 infection, the pathophysiology underlying long-COVID is not yet well characterized, and there is no established therapy. We performed a deep immune profiling in nine patients with persistent symptoms (PSP), before and after a 4-day prednisone course, and five post-COVID-19 patients without persistent symptoms (NSP). PSP showed a perturbed distribution of circulating mononuclear cell populations. Symptoms in PSP were accompanied by a pro-inflammatory phenotype characterized by increased conventional dendritic cells and augmented expression of antigen presentation, co-stimulation, migration, and activation markers in monocytes. The adaptive immunity compartment in PSP showed a Th1-predominance, decreased naïve and regulatory T cells, and augmentation of the PD-1 exhaustion marker. These immune alterations reverted after the corticosteroid treatment and were maintained during the 4-month follow-up, and their normalization correlated with clinical amelioration. The current work highlights an immunopathogenic basis together with a possible role for steroids in the treatment for long-COVID.

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