eLife (Mar 2021)

Convalescent COVID-19 patients are susceptible to endothelial dysfunction due to persistent immune activation

  • Florence WJ Chioh,
  • Siew-Wai Fong,
  • Barnaby E Young,
  • Kan-Xing Wu,
  • Anthony Siau,
  • Shuba Krishnan,
  • Yi-Hao Chan,
  • Guillaume Carissimo,
  • Louis LY Teo,
  • Fei Gao,
  • Ru San Tan,
  • Liang Zhong,
  • Angela S Koh,
  • Seow-Yen Tan,
  • Paul A Tambyah,
  • Laurent Renia,
  • Lisa FP Ng,
  • David C Lye,
  • Christine Cheung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.64909
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

Numerous reports of vascular events after an initial recovery from COVID-19 form our impetus to investigate the impact of COVID-19 on vascular health of recovered patients. We found elevated levels of circulating endothelial cells (CECs), a biomarker of vascular injury, in COVID-19 convalescents compared to healthy controls. In particular, those with pre-existing conditions (e.g., hypertension, diabetes) had more pronounced endothelial activation hallmarks than non-COVID-19 patients with matched cardiovascular risk. Several proinflammatory and activated T lymphocyte-associated cytokines sustained from acute infection to recovery phase, which correlated positively with CEC measures, implicating cytokine-driven endothelial dysfunction. Notably, we found higher frequency of effector T cells in our COVID-19 convalescents compared to healthy controls. The activation markers detected on CECs mapped to counter receptors found primarily on cytotoxic CD8+ T cells, raising the possibility of cytotoxic effector cells targeting activated endothelial cells. Clinical trials in preventive therapy for post-COVID-19 vascular complications may be needed.

Keywords