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1.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(22)2022 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2116202

ABSTRACT

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-induced metabolic alterations have been proposed as a source for prognostic biomarkers and may harbor potential for therapeutic exploitation. However, the metabolic impact of COVID-19 in hemodialysis (HD), a setting of profound a priori alterations, remains unstudied. To evaluate potential COVID-19 biomarkers in end-stage kidney disease (CKD G5), we analyzed the plasma metabolites in different COVID-19 stages in patients with or without HD. We recruited 18 and 9 asymptomatic and mild, 11 and 11 moderate, 2 and 13 severely affected, and 10 and 6 uninfected HD and non-HD patients, respectively. Plasma samples were taken at the time of diagnosis and/or upon admission to the hospital and analyzed by targeted metabolomics and cytokine/chemokine profiling. Targeted metabolomics confirmed stage-dependent alterations of the metabolome in non-HD patients with COVID-19, which were less pronounced in HD patients. Elevated kynurenine levels and lipid dysregulation, shown by an increase in circulating free fatty acids and a decrease in lysophospholipids, could distinguish patients with moderate COVID-19 from non-infected individuals in both groups. Kynurenine and lipid alterations were also associated with ICAM-1 and IL-15 levels in HD and non-HD patients. Our findings support the kynurenine pathway and plasma lipids as universal biomarkers of moderate and severe COVID-19 independent of kidney function.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Kynurenine , Humans , Tryptophan , Renal Dialysis , Lipids
3.
Nephrology, dialysis, transplantation : official publication of the European Dialysis and Transplant Association - European Renal Association ; 37(Suppl 3), 2022.
Article in English | EuropePMC | ID: covidwho-1999290

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS Patients on haemodialysis (HD) are expected to have excess mortality in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). This was challenged by a recent study reporting HD patients to have comparable mortality and decreased ICU admissions when hospitalized with COVID-19. It was speculated that an altered immune system due to chronic inflammation might protect HD patients from severe COVID-19. Therefore, we designed a study to describe the peripheral blood immune phenotype in HD patients and respective controls with COVID-19. METHOD Sixty-four patients (31 HD, 33 non-HD) with PCR-confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and 16 control patients (10 HD, 6 non-HD) were prospectively included. According to symptoms, COVID-19 patients were categorized as asymptomatic/mild and moderate/severe COVID-19 phenotypes. Cytokine profiling and immune phenotyping were performed. RESULTS Th1 and Th17 plasma cytokine levels were highly increased in HD patients without SARS-CoV-2 infection and were not significantly regulated during COVID-19. In non-HD COVID-19 patients, these cytokines increased significantly with disease severity. While all patients with moderate/severe COVID-19 showed hallmarks of COVID-19 such as decreased CD3+ CD4+ and CD8+ and CD4+CD25hiFoxP3+ regulatory T cells, significantly increased CD38+CD8+ effector memory and CD38+CD8+ TEMRA T cells were detected in HD compared to non-HD patients with moderate/severe COVID-19. Furthermore, CD161+CD8+ T cells decreased significantly in non-HD COVID-19 patients dependent on disease severity, but not in HD patients. Dynamics of B cells and subtypes were comparable in HD and non-HD COVID-19 patients. Significantly fewer moderate/severe COVID-19 HD patients needed ICU treatment [1/13 (7.7%) HD, 12/24 (50%) non-HD], whereas no difference in mortality was observed [4/31 (12.9%) HD, 6/33 non-HD (18.2%)]. CONCLUSION HD patients might be protected from severe COVID-19 due to their chronic inflammatory state with increased CD38+CD8+ effector memory and TEMRA T cells as well as CD161+CD8+ T cells.

4.
Front Med (Lausanne) ; 9: 818882, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1822377

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has major implications on kidney transplant recipients (KTRs) since they show increased mortality due to impaired immune responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection and a reduced efficacy of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. Surprisingly, dialysis patients have shown superior seroconversion rates after vaccination compared to KTRs. Therefore, we investigated peripheral blood B cell (BC) composition before and after kidney transplantation (KT) and aimed to screen the BC compartment to explain impaired antibody generation. METHODS: A total of 105 patients were recruited, and multicolor flow cytometric phenotyping of peripheral venous blood BC subpopulations was performed before and 1 year after KT. Complete follow-up was available for 71 individuals. Anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies were collected retrospectively and were available for 40 subjects, who had received two doses of an mRNA-based vaccine (BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273). RESULTS: Overall, relative BC frequencies within lymphocytes decreased, and their absolute counts trended in the same direction 1 year after KT as compared to CKD G5 patients. Frequencies and absolute numbers of naïve BCs remained stable. Frequencies of double negative BCs, a heterogeneous subpopulation of antigen experienced BCs lacking CD27 expression, were increased after KT, yet their absolute counts were similar at both time points. Transitional BCs (TrBCs) and plasmablasts were significantly reduced after KT in absolute and relative terms. Memory BCs were affected differently since class-switched and IgM-only subsets decreased after KT, but unswitched and IgD-only memory BCs remained unchanged. CD86+ and CD5+ expression on BCs was downregulated after KT. Correlational analysis revealed that TrBCs were the only subset to correlate with titer levels after SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. Responders showed higher TrBCs, both absolute and relative, than non-responders. CONCLUSION: Together, after 1 year, KTRs showed persistent and profound compositional changes within the BC compartment. Low TrBCs, 1 year after KT, may account for the low serological response to SARS-CoV-2 vaccination in KTRs compared to dialysis patients. Our findings need confirmation in further studies as they may guide vaccination strategies.

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