Sex differences in symptomatology and immune profiles of Long COVID

Abstract:

Strong sex differences in the frequencies and manifestations of Long COVID (LC) have been reported with females significantly more likely than males to present with LC after acute SARS-CoV-2 infection1-7. However, whether immunological traits underlying LC differ between sexes, and whether such differences explain the differential manifestations of LC symptomology is currently unknown.

Here, we performed sex-based multi-dimensional immune-endocrine profiling of 165 individuals8 with and without LC in an exploratory, cross-sectional study to identify key immunological traits underlying biological sex differences in LC.

We found that female and male participants with LC experienced different sets of symptoms, and distinct patterns of organ system involvement, with female participants suffering from a higher symptom burden. Machine learning approaches identified differential sets of immune features that characterized LC in females and males. Males with LC had decreased frequencies of monocyte and DC populations, elevated NK cells, and plasma cytokines including IL-8 and TGF-β-family members.

Females with LC had increased frequencies of exhausted T cells, cytokine-secreting T cells, higher antibody reactivity to latent herpes viruses including EBV, HSV-2, and CMV, and lower testosterone levels than their control female counterparts. Testosterone levels were significantly associated with lower symptom burden in LC participants over sex designation.

These findings suggest distinct immunological processes of LC in females and males and illuminate the crucial role of immune-endocrine dysregulation in sex-specific pathology.

Source: Julio Silva, Takehiro Takahashi, Jamie Wood, Peiwen Lu, Sasha Tabachnikova, Jeffrey Gehlhausen, Kerrie Greene, Bornali Bhattacharjee, Valter Silva Monteiro, Carolina Lucas, Rahul Dhodapkar, Laura Tabacof, Mario Pena-Hernandez, Kathy Kamath, Tianyang Mao, Dayna Mccarthy, Ruslan Medzhitov, David van Dijk, Harlan Krumholz, Leying Guan, David Putrino, Akiko Iwasaki. Sex differences in symptomatology and immune profiles of Long COVID. medRxiv 2024.02.29.24303568; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.02.29.24303568 https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.02.29.24303568v1 (Full study available as PDF file)

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Viruses and Related Conditions in Women: The Liver Link

Abstract:

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) can be triggered by different factors and create a complex health situation. In the last decades incidence has been increasing. This situation is a clear example of how humans, viruses, and the environment are all connected.
In the 90s cases related to CFS, complaints about a feeling of chronic fatigue, inability for everyday tasks, dull pain, cephalalgia, de-pression, anxiety, poor concentration. Clinical tests for EBV, HHV, CMV, IgG, IgM, T4 and T8 subsets were tested, along with hormones and hemogram tests. Most of the cases were women. The timeline of the medical history showed also myomas, breast lumps, premenstrual syndrome previously to CFS development. The nature of these conditions promoted the idea of a possible common link among them and CFS. Some cases also suffered from allergies, food intolerances, candidiasis, intestinal impairment, thyroid implications, endometriosis.
As an initial working hypothesis, The Liver Link (TLL) was proposed in order to understand those different conditions affecting body, mind and emotional wellbeing. Considering liver implication can make a difference in treatment and recovery. Low grade inflammatory conditions are related to Th2 predominance and liver functions. Functional disharmonies are very important because they usually still do not appear in any conventional tests.
In 2002, TLL was presented as a framework to explain the concomitance of CFS and other conditions and the relationship with some viruses such as EBV, HHV, CMV, as a lecture in a congress at the University of Westminster (London). When SARS-CoV-2 outbroke, TLL helped to warn about the post-covid syndrome more likely to occur in specific individuals.
Source: Lorite-Ayán, N. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Viruses and Related Conditions in Women: The Liver Link. Preprints 2024, 2024011654. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202401.1654.v1 https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202401.1654/v1 (Full text available as PDF file)

Chronic viral coinfections differentially affect the likelihood of developing long COVID

Abstract:

BACKGROUND. The presence and reactivation of chronic viral infections, such as EBV, CMV, and HIV, have been proposed as potential contributors to long COVID (LC), but studies in well-characterized postacute cohorts of individuals with COVID-19 over a longer time course consistent with current case definitions of LC are limited.

METHODS. In a cohort of 280 adults with prior SARS-CoV-2 infection, we assessed the presence and types of LC symptoms and prior medical history (including COVID-19 history and HIV status) and performed serological testing for EBV and CMV using a commercial laboratory. We used covariate-adjusted binary logistic regression models to identify independent associations between variables and LC symptoms.

RESULTS. We observed that LC symptoms, such as fatigue and neurocognitive dysfunction, at a median of 4 months following initial diagnosis were independently associated with serological evidence suggesting recent EBV reactivation (early antigen–diffuse IgG positivity) or high nuclear antigen (EBNA) IgG levels but not with ongoing EBV viremia. Serological evidence suggesting recent EBV reactivation (early antigen–diffuse IgG positivity) was most strongly associated with fatigue (OR = 2.12). Underlying HIV infection was also independently associated with neurocognitive LC (OR = 2.5). Interestingly, participants who had serologic evidence of prior CMV infection were less likely to develop neurocognitive LC (OR = 0.52).

CONCLUSION. Overall, these findings suggest differential effects of chronic viral coinfections on the likelihood of developing LC and association with distinct syndromic patterns. Further assessment during the acute phase of COVID-19 is warranted.

Source: Peluso MJ, Deveau TM, Munter SE, Ryder D, Buck A, Beck-Engeser G, Chan F, Lu S, Goldberg SA, Hoh R, Tai V, Torres L, Iyer NS, Deswal M, Ngo LH, Buitrago M, Rodriguez A, Chen JY, Yee BC, Chenna A, Winslow JW, Petropoulos CJ, Deitchman AN, Hellmuth J, Spinelli MA, Durstenfeld MS, Hsue PY, Kelly JD, Martin JN, Deeks SG, Hunt PW, Henrich TJ. Chronic viral coinfections differentially affect the likelihood of developing long COVID. J Clin Invest. 2023 Feb 1;133(3):e163669. doi: 10.1172/JCI163669. PMID: 36454631. https://www.jci.org/articles/view/163669 (Full text)

Serological and virological investigation of the role of the herpesviruses EBV, CMV and HHV-6 in post-infective fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Multiple previous studies have sought evidence for ongoing, active infection with, or reactivation of, Herpesviruses in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), with conflicting results. This study aimed to clarify this by studying 20 patients enrolled in a well-characterized model of the onset and evolution of CFS, the prospective cohort of the Dubbo Infection Outcomes Study (DIOS).

The patients selected for examination included five CFS patients with primary Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection; five CFS patients with acute viral infection not caused by EBV; and 10 matched controls with prompt resolution of primary EBV infection. Serum samples from three timepoints were assayed using a comprehensive range of serological assays for EBV, HHV-6, and CMV. Viral genomes were assessed using quantitative PCR assays. All patients were seropositive for HHV-6, and 10 were seropositive for CMV at infection baseline (five patients and five controls). Low titer CMV IgM antibodies were found at infection baseline in two of these cases and three control patients. HHV-6 IgG antibody titers were highest at infection baseline but did not differ between the CFS cases and the control patients. There were increases in EBV IgG VCA p18, EBNA-1 IgG, and EA IgG titers over time, but these did not differ between CFS cases and control patients. EBV and HHV6 DNA levels were at control levels in a minority of samples, and CMV was undetectable in all samples. These data do not support the hypothesis of ongoing or reactivated EBV, HHV-6, or CMV infection in the pathogenesis of CFS.

 

Source: Cameron B, Flamand L, Juwana H, Middeldorp J, Naing Z, Rawlinson W, Ablashi D, Lloyd A. Serological and virological investigation of the role of the herpesviruses EBV, CMV and HHV-6 in post-infective fatigue syndrome. J Med Virol. 2010 Oct;82(10):1684-8. doi: 10.1002/jmv.21873. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20827765

 

Cytomegalovirus and Epstein-Barr Virus Infection as a Cause of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in Travelers to Tropical Countries

Although for research purposes the clinical definition of the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is well established, many aspects of this illness such as its etiology, pathogenesis, and treatment are still unknown. Even the clinical definition is subject to controversy, and although much effort has been expended in the investigation of the clinical aspects of the syndrome, little is known about its epidemiology.

This article considers a cohort of 14 cases that meet the criteria of CFS.The signs and symptoms of CFS in these cases manifested during, or shortly after, a trip to a tropical country.These signs and symptoms appeared to be related to cytomegalovirus (MV) or Epstein-Barr virus infection (EBV).

You can read the full article here: http://jtm.oxfordjournals.org/content/jtm/2/1/41.full.pdf

 

Source: Gascón J, Marcos T, Vidal J, Garcia-Forcada A, Corachán M. Cytomegalovirus and Epstein-Barr Virus Infection as a Cause of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in Travelers to Tropical Countries. J Travel Med. 1995 Mar 1;2(1):41-44. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9815359

 

Frequent double infection with Epstein-Barr virus and human herpesvirus-6 in patients with acute infectious mononucleosis

Abstract:

Clinical infectious mononucleosis (IM) represents a benign self-limited form of lymphoproliferative disease which is usually caused by infection with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Microscopic characteristics of this lymphoproliferative disorder, however, are not ultimately specific for EBV infection, but can also be seen in infections with other lymphotropic viruses, especially of the herpesvirus family.

Human herpesvirus-6 (HHV-6) infection can apparently be associated with a number of diseases also seen in EBV infection. Also, postinfectious chronic fatigue syndrome (PICFS) which may follow IM is in more than 60% of the cases accompanied by persistent active HHV-6 infection.

We thus screened serologically 215 cases of acute IM for evidence for infection with EBV, HHV-6 and CMN. Patients were tentatively grouped into those having primary infection or reactivated (probably non-primary) infections. Cases were followed for two years to monitor changes in titers.

Of all 215 cases, 211 (98.1%) were positive for EBV, 137 (63.7%) for primary infections, 21 (9.8%) for reactivated infection, and 53 (24.6%) for latent EBV. Thirty-three (15.3%) cases had primary HHV-6 infection, 63 (29.3%) active or reactivated HHV-6 infection, and 71 (33.9%) latent HHV-6. Double active EBV and HHV-6 infection, including primary and reactivated infections, amounted to 89 (39.5%) cases. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) antibody titers were found in 81 (37%) cases, 48 (22.3%) of which indicated latent infection and 33 (15.3%) active infection. Only two cases had evidence of active CMV infection alone, 1 cases of active CMV and HHV-6 infection. Serologic titers in 12 (5.6%) cases indicated combined active infection with CMV, EBV and HHV-6.

(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

 

Source: Bertram G, Dreiner N, Krueger GR, Ramon A, Ablashi DV, Salahuddin SZ, Balachandram N. Frequent double infection with Epstein-Barr virus and human herpesvirus-6 in patients with acute infectious mononucleosis. In Vivo. 1991 May-Jun;5(3):271-9. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1654150