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Severe Influenza Is Characterized by Prolonged Immune Activation: Results From the SHIVERS Cohort Study
Severe Influenza Is Characterized by Prolonged Immune Activation: Results From the SHIVERS Cohort Study
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Severe Influenza Is Characterized by Prolonged Immune Activation: Results From the SHIVERS Cohort Study
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Severe Influenza Is Characterized by Prolonged Immune Activation: Results From the SHIVERS Cohort Study
Severe Influenza Is Characterized by Prolonged Immune Activation: Results From the SHIVERS Cohort Study

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Severe Influenza Is Characterized by Prolonged Immune Activation: Results From the SHIVERS Cohort Study
Severe Influenza Is Characterized by Prolonged Immune Activation: Results From the SHIVERS Cohort Study
Journal Article

Severe Influenza Is Characterized by Prolonged Immune Activation: Results From the SHIVERS Cohort Study

2018
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Overview
We identified differences in the peripheral cellular immune response between mild and severe influenza. Our findings suggest that individuals with severe influenza may experience immune activation that, despite a slow start, is prolonged, compared with those with mild influenza. Abstract Background The immunologic factors underlying severe influenza are poorly understood. To address this, we compared the immune responses of influenza-confirmed hospitalized individuals with severe acute respiratory illness (SARI) to those of nonhospitalized individuals with influenza-like illness (ILI). Methods Peripheral blood lymphocytes were collected from 27 patients with ILI and 27 with SARI, at time of enrollment and then 2 weeks later. Innate and adaptive cellular immune responses were assessed by flow cytometry, and serum cytokine levels were assessed by a bead-based assay. Results During the acute phase, SARI was associated with significantly reduced numbers of circulating myeloid dendritic cells, CD192+ monocytes, and influenza virus–specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells as compared to ILI. By the convalescent phase, however, most SARI cases displayed continued immune activation characterized by increased numbers of CD16+ monocytes and proliferating, and influenza virus–specific, CD8+ T cells as compared to ILI cases. SARI was also associated with reduced amounts of cytokines that regulate T-cell responses (ie, interleukin 4, interleukin 13, interleukin 12, interleukin 10, and tumor necrosis factor β) and hematopoiesis (interleukin 3 and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor) but increased amounts of a proinflammatory cytokine (tumor necrosis factor α), chemotactic cytokines (MDC, MCP-1, GRO, and fractalkine), and growth-promoting cytokines (PDGFBB/AA, VEGF, and EGF) as compared to ILI. Conclusions Severe influenza cases showed a delay in the peripheral immune activation that likely led prolonged inflammation, compared with mild influenza cases.