Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
mBio. 2023 Feb 28;14(1):e0328722. doi: 10.1128/mbio.03287-22. Epub 2023 Jan 10.
The impact of preexisting antibodies to the four endemic human coronaviruses (ehCoV) (229E, OC43, NL63, and HKU1) on severe (hospitalization) coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outcomes has been described in small cohorts. Many studies have measured ehCoV 229E, OC43, NL63, and HKU1 antibody levels weeks after recovery rather than in the first weeks of illness, which is more relevant to early hospitalizations. Antibody levels to the spike protein of the four coronaviruses (229E, OC43, NL63, and HKU1), as well as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), were measured both before and immediately after convalescent or control plasma transfusion in 51 participants who were hospitalized and 250 who were not hospitalized, as well as in 71 convalescent and 50 control plasma donors as a subset from a completed randomized controlled trial. In COVID-19 convalescent plasma donors, the ehCoV spike antibodies were 1.2 to 2 times greater than the control donor unit levels, while donor COVID-19 convalescent plasma (CCP) SARS-CoV-2 spike antibodies were more than 600 times the control plasma units. Plasma transfusion, whether COVID-19 convalescent or control, did not alter the post-transfusion antibody levels for the endemic human coronaviruses (229E, OC43, NL63, and HKU1) in those hospitalized and not hospitalized, despite the 1.2- to 2-fold elevation in donor COVID-19 convalescent plasma. There was no influence of prior antibody levels to 229E, OC43, NL63, and HKU1 or post-transfusion antibody levels on subsequent hospitalization. These data, from a well-controlled prospective randomized clinical trial, add evidence that antibodies to ehCoV do not significantly impact COVID-19 outcomes, despite the apparent back-boosting of some ehCoV after SARS-CoV-2 infection. The relevance of preexisting immunity to the four endemic human coronaviruses in the first week of COVID-19 illness on the outcome of COVID-19 progression stems from the high prevalence of the ehCoV and SARS-CoV-2 coronaviruses. The question has been raised of whether therapeutic convalescent plasma or control plasma containing ehCoV antibodies might alter the outcome of COVID-19 progression to hospitalization. Here, we observed that plasma transfusion did not significantly change the preexisting ehCoV antibody levels. In over 50 hospitalized participants and 250 nonhospitalized participants, ehCoV antibody levels were comparable, without statistical differences. Antibody levels were stable over the more than 12 months of the intervention trial, with individual heterogeneity similar in hospitalized and nonhospitalized participants. The ehCoV antibodies in plasma transfusion did not alter the recipient preexisting antibody levels nor hasten the COVID-19 progression to hospitalization in this clinical trial data.
四种地方性人类冠状病毒(ehCoV)(229E、OC43、NL63 和 HKU1)的预先存在的抗体对严重(住院)的 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)结局的影响在小队列中已有描述。许多研究在康复后数周而不是在疾病的最初几周测量 ehCoV 229E、OC43、NL63 和 HKU1 抗体水平,这与早期住院更相关。在 51 名住院和 250 名未住院患者以及 71 名恢复期和 50 名对照血浆供体中,测量了四种冠状病毒(229E、OC43、NL63 和 HKU1)的刺突蛋白以及严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒 2(SARS-CoV-2)的抗体水平,这是一项完成的随机对照试验的亚组。在 COVID-19 恢复期血浆供体中,ehCoV 刺突抗体比对照供体单位水平高 1.2 至 2 倍,而供体 COVID-19 恢复期血浆(CCP)SARS-CoV-2 刺突抗体比对照血浆单位高 600 多倍。尽管 COVID-19 恢复期血浆供体中的 ehCoV 抗体水平升高了 1.2 至 2 倍,但 COVID-19 恢复期或对照血浆的输血并没有改变住院和未住院患者体内的内源性人类冠状病毒(229E、OC43、NL63 和 HKU1)的输血后抗体水平。尽管 229E、OC43、NL63 和 HKU1 预先存在的抗体水平或输血后的抗体水平对随后的住院没有影响。这些来自精心控制的前瞻性随机临床试验的数据增加了证据,表明 ehCoV 抗体不会显著影响 COVID-19 结局,尽管 SARS-CoV-2 感染后 ehCoV 的某些抗体似乎有所增强。在 COVID-19 发病的第一周内,对四种地方性人类冠状病毒的预先存在的免疫对 COVID-19 进展结局的影响源于 ehCoV 和 SARS-CoV-2 冠状病毒的高流行率。人们提出了这样一个问题,即含有 ehCoV 抗体的治疗性恢复期血浆或对照血浆是否会改变 COVID-19 进展至住院的结局。在这里,我们观察到输血并没有显著改变预先存在的 ehCoV 抗体水平。在 50 多名住院患者和 250 名非住院患者中,ehCoV 抗体水平相似,无统计学差异。在超过 12 个月的干预试验中,抗体水平稳定,住院和非住院患者的个体异质性相似。在这项临床试验数据中,输血中的 ehCoV 抗体并没有改变接受者预先存在的抗体水平,也没有加速 COVID-19 进展至住院。