Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jun 2022)

NKG2A Expression among CD8 Cells Is Associated with COVID-19 Progression in Hypertensive Patients: Insights from the BRACE CORONA Randomized Trial

  • Renata Moll-Bernardes,
  • Sérgio C. Fortier,
  • Andréa S. Sousa,
  • Renato D. Lopes,
  • Narendra Vera,
  • Luciana Conde,
  • André Feldman,
  • Guilherme Arruda,
  • Mauro Cabral-Castro,
  • Denílson C. Albuquerque,
  • Thiago C. Paula,
  • Thyago Furquim,
  • Vitor A. Loures,
  • Karla Giusti,
  • Nathália Oliveira,
  • Ariane Macedo,
  • Pedro Barros e Silva,
  • Fábio De Luca,
  • Marisol Kotsugai,
  • Rafael Domiciano,
  • Flávia A. Silva,
  • Mayara F. Santos,
  • Olga F. Souza,
  • Fernando A. Bozza,
  • Ronir R. Luiz,
  • Emiliano Medei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11133713
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 13
p. 3713

Abstract

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Cardiovascular comorbidities and immune-response dysregulation are associated with COVID-19 severity. We aimed to explore the key immune cell profile and understand its association with disease progression in 156 patients with hypertension that were hospitalized due to COVID-19. The primary outcome was progression to severe disease. The probability of progression to severe disease was estimated using a logistic regression model that included clinical variables and immune cell subsets associated with the primary outcome. Obesity; diabetes; oxygen saturation; lung involvement on computed tomography (CT) examination; the C-reactive protein concentration; total lymphocyte count; proportions of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells; CD4/CD8 ratio; CD8+ HLA-DR MFI; and CD8+ NKG2A MFI on admission were all associated with progression to severe COVID-19. This study demonstrated that increased CD8+ NKG2A MFI at hospital admission, in combination with some clinical variables, is associated with a high risk of COVID-19 progression in hypertensive patients. These findings reinforce the hypothesis of the functional exhaustion of T cells with the increased expression of NKG2A in patients with severe COVID-19, elucidating how severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection may break down the innate antiviral immune response at an early stage of the disease, with future potential therapeutic implications.

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