P-1611. Longitudinal Measurement of Peripheral Blood Cytokines and COVID-19 Severity and Long COVID Outcomes in the EPIC3 Study
Calen Mendall, Xumin Li, Vivek Pakanati, Cindy H Liu, Tracy Wang, Daniel Morelli, Anna Korpak, Aaron Baraff, Stuart N Isaacs, Amy Vittor, Kyong-Mi Chang, Elizabeth Le, Nicholas L Smith, Jennifer S Lee, Jennifer M Ross, Javeed Shah

TL;DR
This study examines how cytokine levels in U.S. Veterans with COVID-19 relate to disease severity and long-term symptoms, finding some cytokines like IL-1RA are linked to more severe outcomes.
Contribution
The study identifies specific cytokines associated with severe acute and late-stage SARS-CoV-2 infection in a high-risk Veteran population.
Findings
Higher IL-1RA and IP-10 levels during acute infection were linked to more severe disease.
IL-1RA remained significant in late infection, suggesting a persistent immune response.
No cytokines were significantly associated with Long COVID outcomes after adjusting for multiple comparisons.
Abstract
Immune profile shifts during acute and late SARS-CoV-2 infection may provide insight into the risk of severe COVID-19 and Long COVID. U.S. Veterans are at high risk of severe or persistent COVID-19; associations between these outcomes and immune profiles during acute and late SARS-CoV-2 infection are not currently described in this population.Table 1.Summary of characteristics of SARS-CoV-2 positive U.S. Veteran participants included in study.Acute infection samples were collected 0-7 days following a positive SARS-CoV-2 test. Late infection samples were collected between 14-42 days following a positive test. Continuous variables are summarized by their median and interquartile range. Categorical variables are summarized by count and percent of samples. Charlson Comorbidity Index excludes age from the calculation.Table 2.Cytokines assessed in the 45-plex assays.The subset that had less…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · Diabetes and associated disorders · Long-Term Effects of COVID-19
