4.5 Article

Imbalance between alpha-1-antitrypsin and interleukin 6 is associated with in-hospital mortality and thrombosis during COVID-19

期刊

BIOCHIMIE
卷 202, 期 -, 页码 206-211

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ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.biochi.2022.07.012

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  1. Credit Agricole d'Ile-de-France Mecenat
  2. French national agency for research ANR (Agence nationale de la recherche)
  3. Assistance Publique-Hopitaux de Paris (AP-HP)

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This study examines the ability of alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT) to predict thrombosis and in-hospital mortality during COVID-19. The results show that patients with higher levels of AAT are more prone to thrombosis and have a higher survival rate. There is no significant correlation between abnormal AAT variants and thrombosis.
Thrombosis is a hallmark of severe COVID-19. Alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT), an inflammation-inducible serpin with anti-inflammatory, tissue protective and anticoagulant properties may be involved in severe COVID-19 pathophysiology including thrombosis onset. In this study, we examined AAT ability to predict occurrence of thrombosis and in-hospital mortality during COVID-19. To do so, we performed a monocentric cross-sectional study of 137 hospitalized patients with COVID-19 of whom 56 (41%) were critically ill and 33 (22.4%) suffered from thrombosis during hospitalization. We measured AAT and IL-6 plasma levels in all patients and phenotyped AAT in a subset of patients with or without thrombosis paired for age, sex and COVID-19 severity. We observed that AAT levels at admission were higher in both non-survivors and thrombosis patients than in survivors and non-thrombosis patients. AAT: IL-6 ratio was lower in non-survivors and thrombosis patients. In a logistic regression multivariable analysis model adjusted on age, BMI and D-dimer levels, a higher AAT: IL-6 was a protective factor of both in-hospital mortality (Odds ratio, OR: 0.07 95%CI [0.02-0.25], p < 0.001) and thrombosis (OR 0.36 95%CI [0.14 -0.82], p 1/4 0.02). AAT phenotyping did not show a higher proportion of AAT abnormal variants in thrombosis patients.Our findings suggest an insufficient production of AAT regarding inflammation intensity during severe COVID-19. AAT appeared as a powerful predictive marker of severity, mortality and thrombosis mirroring the imbalance between harmful inflammation and protective counter-balancing mechanism in COVID-19. Restoring the balance between AAT and inflammation could offer therapeutic opportunities in severe COVID-19. (c) 2022 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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