Cargando…

Complement C3 vs C5 inhibition in severe COVID-19: Early clinical findings reveal differential biological efficacy

Growing clinical evidence has implicated complement as a pivotal driver of COVID-19 immunopathology. Deregulated complement activation may fuel cytokine-driven hyper-inflammation, thrombotic microangiopathy and NET-driven immunothrombosis, thereby leading to multi-organ failure. Complement therapeut...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mastellos, Dimitrios C., Pires da Silva, Bruno G.P., Fonseca, Benedito A.L., Fonseca, Natasha P., Auxiliadora-Martins, Maria, Mastaglio, Sara, Ruggeri, Annalisa, Sironi, Marina, Radermacher, Peter, Chrysanthopoulou, Akrivi, Skendros, Panagiotis, Ritis, Konstantinos, Manfra, Ilenia, Iacobelli, Simona, Huber-Lang, Markus, Nilsson, Bo, Yancopoulou, Despina, Connolly, E. Sander, Garlanda, Cecilia, Ciceri, Fabio, Risitano, Antonio M., Calado, Rodrigo T., Lambris, John D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7501834/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32961333
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clim.2020.108598
_version_ 1783584111479226368
author Mastellos, Dimitrios C.
Pires da Silva, Bruno G.P.
Fonseca, Benedito A.L.
Fonseca, Natasha P.
Auxiliadora-Martins, Maria
Mastaglio, Sara
Ruggeri, Annalisa
Sironi, Marina
Radermacher, Peter
Chrysanthopoulou, Akrivi
Skendros, Panagiotis
Ritis, Konstantinos
Manfra, Ilenia
Iacobelli, Simona
Huber-Lang, Markus
Nilsson, Bo
Yancopoulou, Despina
Connolly, E. Sander
Garlanda, Cecilia
Ciceri, Fabio
Risitano, Antonio M.
Calado, Rodrigo T.
Lambris, John D.
author_facet Mastellos, Dimitrios C.
Pires da Silva, Bruno G.P.
Fonseca, Benedito A.L.
Fonseca, Natasha P.
Auxiliadora-Martins, Maria
Mastaglio, Sara
Ruggeri, Annalisa
Sironi, Marina
Radermacher, Peter
Chrysanthopoulou, Akrivi
Skendros, Panagiotis
Ritis, Konstantinos
Manfra, Ilenia
Iacobelli, Simona
Huber-Lang, Markus
Nilsson, Bo
Yancopoulou, Despina
Connolly, E. Sander
Garlanda, Cecilia
Ciceri, Fabio
Risitano, Antonio M.
Calado, Rodrigo T.
Lambris, John D.
author_sort Mastellos, Dimitrios C.
collection PubMed
description Growing clinical evidence has implicated complement as a pivotal driver of COVID-19 immunopathology. Deregulated complement activation may fuel cytokine-driven hyper-inflammation, thrombotic microangiopathy and NET-driven immunothrombosis, thereby leading to multi-organ failure. Complement therapeutics have gained traction as candidate drugs for countering the detrimental consequences of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Whether blockade of terminal complement effectors (C5, C5a, or C5aR1) may elicit similar outcomes to upstream intervention at the level of C3 remains debated. Here we compare the efficacy of the C5-targeting monoclonal antibody eculizumab with that of the compstatin-based C3-targeted drug candidate AMY-101 in small independent cohorts of severe COVID-19 patients. Our exploratory study indicates that therapeutic complement inhibition abrogates COVID-19 hyper-inflammation. Both C3 and C5 inhibitors elicit a robust anti-inflammatory response, reflected by a steep decline in C-reactive protein and IL-6 levels, marked lung function improvement, and resolution of SARS-CoV-2-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). C3 inhibition afforded broader therapeutic control in COVID-19 patients by attenuating both C3a and sC5b-9 generation and preventing FB consumption. This broader inhibitory profile was associated with a more robust decline of neutrophil counts, attenuated neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) release, faster serum LDH decline, and more prominent lymphocyte recovery. These early clinical results offer important insights into the differential mechanistic basis and underlying biology of C3 and C5 inhibition in COVID-19 and point to a broader pathogenic involvement of C3-mediated pathways in thromboinflammation. They also support the evaluation of these complement-targeting agents as COVID-19 therapeutics in large prospective trials.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7501834
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Elsevier Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-75018342020-09-21 Complement C3 vs C5 inhibition in severe COVID-19: Early clinical findings reveal differential biological efficacy Mastellos, Dimitrios C. Pires da Silva, Bruno G.P. Fonseca, Benedito A.L. Fonseca, Natasha P. Auxiliadora-Martins, Maria Mastaglio, Sara Ruggeri, Annalisa Sironi, Marina Radermacher, Peter Chrysanthopoulou, Akrivi Skendros, Panagiotis Ritis, Konstantinos Manfra, Ilenia Iacobelli, Simona Huber-Lang, Markus Nilsson, Bo Yancopoulou, Despina Connolly, E. Sander Garlanda, Cecilia Ciceri, Fabio Risitano, Antonio M. Calado, Rodrigo T. Lambris, John D. Clin Immunol Article Growing clinical evidence has implicated complement as a pivotal driver of COVID-19 immunopathology. Deregulated complement activation may fuel cytokine-driven hyper-inflammation, thrombotic microangiopathy and NET-driven immunothrombosis, thereby leading to multi-organ failure. Complement therapeutics have gained traction as candidate drugs for countering the detrimental consequences of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Whether blockade of terminal complement effectors (C5, C5a, or C5aR1) may elicit similar outcomes to upstream intervention at the level of C3 remains debated. Here we compare the efficacy of the C5-targeting monoclonal antibody eculizumab with that of the compstatin-based C3-targeted drug candidate AMY-101 in small independent cohorts of severe COVID-19 patients. Our exploratory study indicates that therapeutic complement inhibition abrogates COVID-19 hyper-inflammation. Both C3 and C5 inhibitors elicit a robust anti-inflammatory response, reflected by a steep decline in C-reactive protein and IL-6 levels, marked lung function improvement, and resolution of SARS-CoV-2-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). C3 inhibition afforded broader therapeutic control in COVID-19 patients by attenuating both C3a and sC5b-9 generation and preventing FB consumption. This broader inhibitory profile was associated with a more robust decline of neutrophil counts, attenuated neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) release, faster serum LDH decline, and more prominent lymphocyte recovery. These early clinical results offer important insights into the differential mechanistic basis and underlying biology of C3 and C5 inhibition in COVID-19 and point to a broader pathogenic involvement of C3-mediated pathways in thromboinflammation. They also support the evaluation of these complement-targeting agents as COVID-19 therapeutics in large prospective trials. Elsevier Inc. 2020-11 2020-09-19 /pmc/articles/PMC7501834/ /pubmed/32961333 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clim.2020.108598 Text en © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active.
spellingShingle Article
Mastellos, Dimitrios C.
Pires da Silva, Bruno G.P.
Fonseca, Benedito A.L.
Fonseca, Natasha P.
Auxiliadora-Martins, Maria
Mastaglio, Sara
Ruggeri, Annalisa
Sironi, Marina
Radermacher, Peter
Chrysanthopoulou, Akrivi
Skendros, Panagiotis
Ritis, Konstantinos
Manfra, Ilenia
Iacobelli, Simona
Huber-Lang, Markus
Nilsson, Bo
Yancopoulou, Despina
Connolly, E. Sander
Garlanda, Cecilia
Ciceri, Fabio
Risitano, Antonio M.
Calado, Rodrigo T.
Lambris, John D.
Complement C3 vs C5 inhibition in severe COVID-19: Early clinical findings reveal differential biological efficacy
title Complement C3 vs C5 inhibition in severe COVID-19: Early clinical findings reveal differential biological efficacy
title_full Complement C3 vs C5 inhibition in severe COVID-19: Early clinical findings reveal differential biological efficacy
title_fullStr Complement C3 vs C5 inhibition in severe COVID-19: Early clinical findings reveal differential biological efficacy
title_full_unstemmed Complement C3 vs C5 inhibition in severe COVID-19: Early clinical findings reveal differential biological efficacy
title_short Complement C3 vs C5 inhibition in severe COVID-19: Early clinical findings reveal differential biological efficacy
title_sort complement c3 vs c5 inhibition in severe covid-19: early clinical findings reveal differential biological efficacy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7501834/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32961333
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clim.2020.108598
work_keys_str_mv AT mastellosdimitriosc complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT piresdasilvabrunogp complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT fonsecabeneditoal complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT fonsecanatashap complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT auxiliadoramartinsmaria complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT mastagliosara complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT ruggeriannalisa complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT sironimarina complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT radermacherpeter complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT chrysanthopoulouakrivi complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT skendrospanagiotis complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT ritiskonstantinos complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT manfrailenia complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT iacobellisimona complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT huberlangmarkus complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT nilssonbo complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT yancopouloudespina complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT connollyesander complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT garlandacecilia complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT cicerifabio complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT risitanoantoniom complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT caladorodrigot complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy
AT lambrisjohnd complementc3vsc5inhibitioninseverecovid19earlyclinicalfindingsrevealdifferentialbiologicalefficacy