4.3 Article

Impact of age and gender on lymphocyte subset counts in patients with COVID-19

Journal

CYTOMETRY PART A
Volume 103, Issue 2, Pages 127-135

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cyto.a.24470

Keywords

age-related; COVID-19; gender-related; lymphocytopenia; SARS-CoV-2

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This study analyzed the changes in lymphocyte subsets in COVID-19 patients and found that cell counts of lymphocytes and their subsets are reduced in severe cases. Age and gender also play a role in the altered cell counts.
In symptomatic patients with acute Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), lymphocytopenia is one of the most prominent laboratory findings. However, to date age and gender have not been considered in assessment of COVID-19-related cell count alterations. In this study, the impact of COVID-19 as well as age and gender on a large variety of lymphocyte subsets was analyzed in 33 COVID-19 patients and compared with cell counts in 50 healthy humans. We confirm that cell counts of total lymphocytes, B, NK, cytotoxic and helper T cells are reduced in patients with severe COVID-19, and this tendency was observed in patients with moderate COVID-19. Decreased cell counts were also found in all subsets of these cell types, except for CD4+ and CD8+ effector memory RA+ (EMRA) and terminal effector CD8+ cells. In multivariate analysis however, we show that in addition to COVID-19, there is an age-dependent reduction of total, central memory (CM), and early CD8+ cell subsets, as well as naive, CM, and regulatory CD4+ cell subsets. Remarkably, reduced naive CD8+ cell counts could be attributed to age alone, and not to COVID-19. By contrast, decreases in other subsets could be largely attributed to COVID-19, and only partly to age. In addition to COVID-19, male gender was a major factor influencing lower counts of CD3+ and CD4+ lymphocyte numbers. Our study confirms that cell counts of lymphocytes and their subsets are reduced in patients with COVID-19, but that age and gender must be considered when interpreting the altered cell counts.

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