Strategies to DAMPen COVID-19-mediated lung and systemic inflammation and vascular injury.

Pubmed ID: 33358868

Pubmed Central ID: PMC7749994

Journal: Translational research : the journal of laboratory and clinical medicine

Publication Date: June 1, 2021

MeSH Terms: Humans, Cytokines, Inflammation, Blood Coagulation Disorders, COVID-19, Respiratory Distress Syndrome, SARS-CoV-2, Nicotinamide Phosphoribosyltransferase, Alarmins, Capillary Permeability, Vascular System Injuries

Grants: P30 ES006694, K08 HL141623, R42 HL145930, R41 HL147769, P01 HL126609, R25 HL126140, R01 HL141387

Authors: Knox KS, Bime C, Garcia JGN, Camp SM, Casanova NG, Nikolich-Zugich J

Cite As: Bime C, Casanova NG, Nikolich-Zugich J, Knox KS, Camp SM, Garcia JGN. Strategies to DAMPen COVID-19-mediated lung and systemic inflammation and vascular injury. Transl Res 2021 Jun;232:37-48. Epub 2020 Dec 20.

Studies:

Abstract

Approximately 15%-20% of patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus (COVID-19) progress beyond mild and self-limited disease to require supplemental oxygen for severe pneumonia; 5% of COVID-19-infected patients further develop acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and multiorgan failure. Despite mortality rates surpassing 40%, key insights into COVID-19-induced ARDS pathology have not been fully elucidated and multiple unmet needs remain. This review focuses on the unmet need for effective therapies that target unchecked innate immunity-driven inflammation which drives unchecked vascular permeability, multiorgan dysfunction and ARDS mortality. Additional unmet needs including the lack of insights into factors predicting pathogenic hyperinflammatory viral host responses, limited approaches to address the vast disease heterogeneity in ARDS, and the absence of clinically-useful ARDS biomarkers. We review unmet needs persisting in COVID-19-induced ARDS in the context of the potential role for damage-associated molecular pattern proteins in lung and systemic hyperinflammatory host responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection that ultimately drive multiorgan dysfunction and ARDS mortality. Insights into promising stratification-enhancing, biomarker-based strategies in COVID-19 and non-COVID ARDS may enable the design of successful clinical trials of promising therapies.