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Differential immune profiles in elderly patients with non-severe versus severe SARS-CoV-2 omicron variant infection: dysregulation of antibody responses and B-cell subsets.
Different immune responses and antibody problems in older patients with mild versus severe Omicron COVID-19
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Abstract
Elderly patients infected with the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant showed an 11-fold increase in IgA, a 12-fold increase in IgM, and a 48-fold increase in IgG antibody levels during the first week of infection.
- In elderly non-severe patients, antibody levels increased progressively within the first two weeks post-symptom onset.
- Severe patients initially had lower antibody levels but experienced significant surges in antibodies during days 4-7 post-symptom onset.
- Both patient groups exhibited generally weak neutralizing activity against the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant.
- A higher proportion of was observed in both groups, with class-switched plasmablasts being more abundant in elderly patients.
- Severe patients showed reduced frequencies of IgG double negative B cells and a decline in co-stimulatory molecule expression.
- The findings suggest that antibody kinetics and B-cell subset distribution may serve as prognostic biomarkers for elderly patients.
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Key numbers
11×
Increase in levels
levels in severe patients from baseline at 4–7 days post-symptom onset.
12×
Increase in levels
levels in severe patients from baseline at 4–7 days post-symptom onset.
48×
Increase in levels
levels in severe patients from baseline at 4–7 days post-symptom onset.