Tocilizumab-treated convalescent COVID-19 patients retain the cross-neutralization potential against SARS-CoV-2 variants

接受托珠单抗治疗的新冠肺炎康复患者仍保留对SARS-CoV-2变种的交叉中和能力。

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作者:Camille Chauvin,Laurine Levillayer,Mathilde Roumier,Hubert Nielly,Claude Roth,Anupama Karnam,Srinivasa Reddy Bonam,Anne Bourgarit ,Clément Dubost,Aurore Bousquet,Sébastien Le Burel,Raphaële Mestiri,Damien Sene,Joris Galland,Marc Vasse,Matthieu Groh,Mathilde Le Marchand,Camille Vassord-Dang,Jean-François Gautier,Nhan Pham-Thi,Christiane Verny,Bruno Pitard,Cyril Planchais,Hugo Mouquet,Richard Paul,Etienne Simon-Loriere,Jagadeesh Bayry,Laurent Gilardin ,Anavaj Sakuntabhai

Abstract

Although tocilizumab treatment in severe and critical coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients has proven its efficacy at the clinical level, there is little evidence supporting the effect of short-term use of interleukin-6 receptor blocking therapy on the B cell sub-populations and the cross-neutralization of SARS-CoV-2 variants in convalescent COVID-19 patients. We performed immunological profiling of 69 tocilizumab-treated and non-treated convalescent COVID-19 patients in total. We observed that SARS-CoV-2-specific IgG1 titers depended on disease severity but not on tocilizumab treatment. The plasma of both treated and non-treated patients infected with the ancestral variant exhibit strong neutralizing activity against the ancestral virus and the Alpha, Beta, and Delta variants of SARS-CoV-2, whereas the Gamma and Omicron viruses were less sensitive to seroneutralization. Overall, we observed that, despite the clinical benefits of short-term tocilizumab therapy in modifying the cytokine storm associated with COVID-19 infections, there were no modifications in the robustness of B cell and IgG responses to Spike antigens.

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