JCI Insight (Feb 2021)

Severe immunosuppression and not a cytokine storm characterizes COVID-19 infections

  • Kenneth E. Remy,
  • Monty Mazer,
  • David A. Striker,
  • Ali H. Ellebedy,
  • Andrew H. Walton,
  • Jacqueline Unsinger,
  • Teresa M. Blood,
  • Philip A. Mudd,
  • Daehan J. Yi,
  • Daniel A. Mannion,
  • Dale F. Osborne,
  • R. Scott Martin,
  • Nitin J. Anand,
  • James P. Bosanquet,
  • Jane Blood,
  • Anne M. Drewry,
  • Charles C. Caldwell,
  • Isaiah R. Turnbull,
  • Scott C. Brakenridge,
  • Lyle L. Moldwawer,
  • Richard S. Hotchkiss

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 17

Abstract

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COVID-19–associated morbidity and mortality have been attributed to a pathologic host response. Two divergent hypotheses have been proposed: hyperinflammatory cytokine storm; and failure of host protective immunity that results in unrestrained viral dissemination and organ injury. A key explanation for the inability to address this controversy has been the lack of diagnostic tools to evaluate immune function in COVID-19 infections. ELISpot, a highly sensitive, functional immunoassay, was employed in 27 patients with COVID-19, 51 patients with sepsis, 18 critically ill nonseptic (CINS) patients, and 27 healthy control volunteers to evaluate adaptive and innate immune status by quantitating T cell IFN-ɣ and monocyte TFN-α production. Circulating T cell subsets were profoundly reduced in COVID-19 patients. Additionally, stimulated blood mononuclear cells produced less than 40%–50% of the IFN-ɣ and TNF-α observed in septic and CINS patients, consistent with markedly impaired immune effector cell function. Approximately 25% of COVID-19 patients had increased IL-6 levels that were not associated with elevations in other canonical proinflammatory cytokines. Collectively, these findings support the hypothesis that COVID-19 suppresses host functional adaptive and innate immunity. Importantly, IL-7 administered ex vivo restored T cell IFN-ɣ production in COVID-19 patients. Thus, ELISpot may functionally characterize host immunity in COVID-19 and inform prospective therapies.

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