[HTML][HTML] Interferon-α2 auto-antibodies in convalescent plasma therapy for COVID-19

MP Raadsen, A Gharbharan, CCE Jordans… - Journal of clinical …, 2022 - Springer
MP Raadsen, A Gharbharan, CCE Jordans, AZ Mykytyn, MM Lamers, PB van den Doel…
Journal of clinical immunology, 2022Springer
Purpose To study the effect of interferon-α2 auto-antibodies (IFN-α2 Abs) on clinical and
virological outcomes in critically ill COVID-19 patients and the risk of IFN-α2 Abs transfer
during convalescent plasma treatment. Methods Sera from healthy controls, cases of COVID-
19, and other respiratory illness were tested for IFN-α2 Abs by ELISA and a pseudo virus–
based neutralization assay. The effects of disease severity, sex, and age on the risk of
having neutralizing IFN-α2 Abs were determined. Longitudinal analyses were performed to …
Purpose
To study the effect of interferon-α2 auto-antibodies (IFN-α2 Abs) on clinical and virological outcomes in critically ill COVID-19 patients and the risk of IFN-α2 Abs transfer during convalescent plasma treatment.
Methods
Sera from healthy controls, cases of COVID-19, and other respiratory illness were tested for IFN-α2 Abs by ELISA and a pseudo virus–based neutralization assay. The effects of disease severity, sex, and age on the risk of having neutralizing IFN-α2 Abs were determined. Longitudinal analyses were performed to determine association between IFN-α2 Abs and survival and viral load and whether serum IFN-α2 Abs appeared after convalescent plasma transfusion.
Results
IFN-α2 neutralizing sera were found only in COVID-19 patients, with proportions increasing with disease severity and age. In the acute stage of COVID-19, all sera from patients with ELISA-detected IFN-α2 Abs (13/164, 7.9%) neutralized levels of IFN-α2 exceeding physiological concentrations found in human plasma and this was associated with delayed viral clearance. Convalescent plasma donors that were anti-IFN-α2 ELISA positive (3/118, 2.5%) did not neutralize the same levels of IFN-α2. Neutralizing serum IFN-α2 Abs were associated with delayed viral clearance from the respiratory tract.
Conclusions
IFN-α2 Abs were detected by ELISA and neutralization assay in COVID-19 patients, but not in ICU patients with other respiratory illnesses. The presence of neutralizing IFN-α2 Abs in critically ill COVID-19 is associated with delayed viral clearance. IFN-α2 Abs in COVID-19 convalescent plasma donors were not neutralizing in the conditions tested.
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