4.7 Article

Further Findings Concerning Endothelial Damage in COVID-19 Patients

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom11091368

Keywords

E-selectin; P-selectin; MCP-2; CCL8; monocyte chemotactic protein

Funding

  1. CAMPANIA, CEINGE-TASK-force COVID-19 [D64I200003800]

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Serum MCP-2 and P-selectin levels are associated with disease severity in COVID-19 patients. MCP-2 levels decrease and P-selectin levels increase in mild patients, while the opposite occurs in severe patients after 1 week of hospitalization. This suggests potential for targeted therapies based on these biomarkers.
Systemic vascular damage with micro/macro-thrombosis is a typical feature of severe COVID-19. However, the pathogenesis of this damage and its predictive biomarkers remain poorly defined. For this reason, in this study, serum monocyte chemotactic protein (MCP)-2 and P- and E-selectin levels were analyzed in 204 patients with COVID-19. Serum MCP-2 and P-selectin were significantly higher in hospitalized patients compared with asymptomatic patients. Furthermore, MCP-2 increased with the WHO stage in hospitalized patients. After 1 week of hospitalization, MCP-2 levels were significantly reduced, while P-selectin increased in patients in WHO stage 3 and decreased in patients in WHO stages 5-7. Serum E-selectin was not significantly different between asymptomatic and hospitalized patients. The lower MCP-2 levels after 1 week suggest that endothelial damage triggered by monocytes occurs early in COVID-19 disease progression. MCP-2 may also predict COVID-19 severity. The increase in P-selectin levels, which further increased in mild patients and reduced in severe patients after 1 week of hospitalization, suggests that the inactive form of the protein produced by the cleavage of the active protein from the platelet membrane is present. This may be used to identify a subset of patients that would benefit from targeted therapies. The unchanged levels of E-selectin in these patients suggest that endothelial damage is less relevant.

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