Résumé:
Infection by novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 causes different presentations of COVID-19
and some patients may progress to a critical, fatal form of the disease that requires their
admission to ICU and invasive mechanical ventilation. In order to predict in advance which
patients could be more susceptible to develop a critical form of COVID-19, it is essential to
define the most adequate biomarkers. In this study, we analyzed several parameters
related to the cellular immune response in blood samples from 109 patients with different
presentations of COVID-19 who were recruited in Hospitals and Primary Healthcare
Centers in Madrid, Spain, during the first pandemic peak between April and June 2020.
Hospitalized patients with the most severe forms of COVID-19 showed a potent
inflammatory response that was not translated into an efficient immune response.
Despite the high levels of effector cytotoxic cell populations such as NK, NKT and CD8+
T cells, they displayed immune exhaustion markers and poor cytotoxic functionality against
target cells infected with pseudotyped SARS-CoV-2 or cells lacking MHC class I molecules.
Moreover, patients with critical COVID-19 showed low levels of the highly cytotoxic TCRgd+
CD8+ T cell subpopulation. Conversely, CD4 count was greatly reduced in association to
high levels of Tregs, low plasma IL-2 and impaired Th1 differentiation. The relative
importance of these immunological parameters to predict COVID-19 severity was
analyzed by Random Forest algorithm and we concluded that the most important
features were related to an efficient cytotoxic response. Therefore, efforts to fight against
SARS-CoV-2 infection should be focused not only to decrease the disproportionate
inflammatory response, but also to elicit an efficient cytotoxic response against the
infected cells and to reduce viral replication.