Critical Care Explorations (Dec 2022)

The Association of Low CD4 Expression on Monocytes and Low CD8+ T-Cell Count at Hospital Admission Predicts the Need for Mechanical Ventilation in Patients With COVID-19 Pneumonia: A Prospective Monocentric Cohort Study

  • Jérôme Allardet-Servent, MD, MSc,
  • Ines Ait Belkacem, PhD,
  • Tewfik Miloud, PhD,
  • Lucas Benarous, MD,
  • Franck Galland, PhD,
  • Philippe Halfon, MD, PhD,
  • Jean-Louis Mège, MD, PhD,
  • Guillaume Penaranda, MSc,
  • Jean-Marc Busnel, PhD,
  • Fabrice Malergue, PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/CCE.0000000000000810
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 12
p. e0810

Abstract

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OBJECTIVES:. To identify COVID-19-associated immunophenotyping patterns at hospital admission and to determine if some patterns could predict the need for mechanical ventilation (MV). DESIGN:. Prospective observational monocentric cohort study. SETTING:. A university-affiliated hospital in Marseille, France. PATIENTS:. Thirty patients presenting with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia were enrolled within the first 48 hours of hospital admission and compared with 18 healthy controls. INTERVENTIONS:. None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:. Whole-blood leukocytes were immunophenotyped with a rapid and simplified one-step flow cytometry method. Thirty-eight immune and five laboratory parameters were compared first between COVID-19 patients and controls and then between the COVID-19 patients who received or not MV during their stays. The variables that significantly discriminated MV from non-MV patients in univariate analysis were entered into a multiple stepwise logistic regression analysis. The COVID-19 patients were predominantly male (87%), aged 61 years (50–71 yr), and 93% received early corticosteroid therapy. Sixteen patients (53%) were managed with noninvasive respiratory support, and 14 (47%) required MV. Compared with controls, COVID-19 patients were characterized by an immune signature featuring: 1) decreased HLA-DR expression on monocytes; 2) reduced basophils, eosinophils, T-cells, NK cells, and nonclassical monocyte count; and 3) up regulation of CD169 on monocytes, CD64 on neutrophils, the adhesion/migration markers (CD62L and CD11b), and the checkpoint inhibitor CD274 on myeloid cells. Among the COVID-19 patients, those who received MV had lower level of CD4 and HLA-DR on monocytes, lower CD8+ T-cell count, and higher lactate dehydrogenase at hospital admission. In multivariate analysis, only CD4 on monocytes (p = 0.032) and CD8+ T-cell count (p = 0.026) were associated with MV requirement. The model combining these two variables provided an area under curve of 0.97 (95% CI, 0.83–0.99). CONCLUSIONS:. The association of low CD4 on monocytes and low CD8+ T-cell count at hospital admission was highly predictive of the need for MV in hospitalized patients with COVID-19 pneumonia.