Résumé:
SARS-CoV-2 infection causes COVID-19, ranging from mild to critical disease in
symptomatic subjects. It is essential to better understand the immunologic responses
occurring in patients with the most severe outcomes. In this study, parameters related to
the humoral immune response elicited against SARS-CoV-2 were analysed in 61 patients
with different presentations of COVID-19 who were recruited in Hospitals and Primary
Healthcare Centres in Madrid, Spain, during the first pandemic peak between April and
June 2020. Subjects were allocated as mild patients without hospitalization, severe
patients hospitalized or critical patients requiring ICU assistance. Critical patients
showed significantly enhanced levels of B cells with memory and plasmablast
phenotypes, as well as higher levels of antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 with
neutralization ability, which were particularly increased in male gender. Despite all this,
antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity was defective in these individuals.
Besides, patients with critical COVID-19 also showed increased IgG levels against
herpesvirus such as CMV, EBV, HSV-1 and VZV, as well as detectable CMV and EBV
viremia in plasma. Altogether, these results suggest an enhanced but ineffectual immune
response in patients with critical COVID-19 that allowed latent herpesvirus reactivation.
These findings should be considered during the clinical management of these patients due
to the potential contribution to the most severe disease during SARS-CoV-2 infection.