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Immunophenotyping Characteristics of Covid-19 Patients: Peripheral Blood Cd8+ Hla-Dr+ T Cells As a Biomarker for Mortality Outcome Publisher Pubmed



Mirsharif ES1 ; Chenary MR2 ; Bozorgmehr M2 ; Mohammadi S3 ; Hashemi SM4 ; Ardestani SK5 ; Beigmohammadi MT6 ; Abdollahi A7 ; Sadeghipour A8 ; Kariminia A9 ; Tuserkani F1 ; Ghazanfari T1, 2
Authors

Source: Journal of Medical Virology Published:2023


Abstract

Introduction: The goal of this study was to identify biomarker(s) to assign risk of mortality in COVID-19 patients to improve intensive care unit (ICU) and coronary care unit management. A total of 100 confirmed COVID-19 patients admitted at Imam Khomeini Hospital in Tehran, were compared to 70 control subjects. Peripheral blood leukocyte was studied using staining reagents included CD3, CD4, CD8, HLA-DR, CD19, CD16, and CD56. The immunophenotyping analysis was evaluated using the FACSCalibur instrument. To investigate the cell density of lung infiltrating T cells, postmortem slides of needle necropsies taken from the lung tissue of 3 critical patients were evaluated by immunohistochemistry staining. The number of lymphocyte subpopulations was significantly lower in COVID-19 patients than in the control group. Regarding the disease severity, the absolute count of T, NK, and HLA-DR+ T cells were significantly reduced in severe patients compared to the moderate ones. The critical patients had a significantly lower count of CD8-HLA-DR+ T cells than the moderate cases. Regarding the disease mortality, based on univariate analysis, the count of HLA-DR+ T, CD8− HLA-DR+ T, and CD8+ HLA-DR+ T cells was associated with mortality in COVID-19 patients. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis showed the count of CD8+ HLA-DR+ T cells is the best candidate as a biomarker for mortality outcome. Furthermore, pulmonary infiltration of T cells in the lung tissue showed only slight infiltrations of CD3+ T cells, with an equal percentage of CD4+ and CD8+ T cell subpopulation in the lung tissue. These findings suggest that close monitoring of the value of CD8+ HLA-DR+ T cells in COVID-19 patients may be helpful to identify high-risk patients. However, further studies with larger sample size are needed. © 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
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