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Researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have shown that patients with acute COVID-19 infection have increased levels of the cytokine IL-26 in their blood. Moreover, high IL-26 levels correlate with an exaggerated inflammatory response that signifies severe cases of the disease. The findings, which are presented in Frontiers in Immunology, indicate that IL-26 is a potential biomarker for severe COVID-19. โ€ฏ 

Vaccines for SARS-CoV-2 have proved effective at reducing the number of cases of severe COVID-19. However, the emergence of new viral variants, limited distribution of the vaccine and declining immunity are problems that drive scientists to find more efficacious treatments for the disease. 

โ€œWe need to understand more about underlying immunological mechanisms in order to find better treatments. There is also a need for improved diagnostics in COVID 19-patients,โ€ says Eduardo Cardenas, postdoc researcher at the Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, and principal author of the new pilot study.  


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The researchers have tried, for the first time, to ascertain whether immune signalling via  the cytokine interleukin-26 (IL-26) is involved in severe COVID-19. 

โ€œWe already know that IL-26 is engaged in mobilising immune cells that combat bacterial infections in the lungs and also in chronic respiratory disease in humans,โ€ says the studyโ€™s last author Anders Lindรฉn, consultant and professor at the Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet. โ€œWhatโ€™s more, IL-26 has antiviral and antibacterial effects.โ€ 

To study how the molecule is involved in COVID-19, the scientists recruited 49 patients who had been hospitalised with SARS-CoV-2-infection, 44 of whom had severe symptoms and needed oxygen therapy. The patients were recruited at a hospital in Stockholm from June 2020 to January 2021. A control group of 27 healthy individuals was also recruited during the same period. The researchers then measured levels of IL-26 protein and other inflammatory compounds in the blood.โ€ฏโ€ฏ 

โ€œWe can show for the first time that blood levels of the cytokine IL-26 are much higher in patients with COVID-19 than in healthy controls,โ€ says Dr Cardenas.โ€ฏ 

The researchers could also see that the increase was associated with the so-called cytokine storm โ€“ an excessive and dangerous inflammatory response that signifies severe cases of COVID-19. 

โ€œOur discovery gives us a potential biomarker for severe COVID-19, but given the antiviral effects of IL-26, we may also have identified a new therapeutic target,โ€ says Professor Lindรฉn. 

According to Dr Cardenas, the results are promising but are preliminary and warrant further study with a larger patient cohort.โ€ฏ 

โ€œSuch a study is on the way and can give more information on the clinical value of measuring IL-26 in COVID-patients, such as whether the levels reflect the severity of the disease. 

IMAGE CREDIT: NASA.


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