https://twitter.com/user/status/1808571017448538440
AI generated summary of Tim Henrich's talk that Amy linked to:
AI generated summary of Tim Henrich's talk that Amy linked to:
- Introduction
- The speaker is continuing a discussion on molecular imaging and digital spatial profiling in long COVID
- The talk aims to highlight the promise of immunotherapy clinical trials
- This presentation is part of the larger LIINC (Long-term Impact of Infection with Novel Coronavirus ) structure
- The pathogenesis-based team oversees tissue processing, hypothesis testing, and cohort infrastructure trials
- Long COVID as a Tissue-Based Disease
- Long COVID is primarily a tissue-based process, not a disease of circulating blood
- Novel methods are needed to identify abnormal immune responses, viral protein persistence, replication, and inflammatory responses
- The team is focusing on non-invasive nuclear imaging and digital spatial profiling
- Work is supported by Poly-Bio Foundation funding
- PET Imaging Study
- Using Positron Emission Tomography (PET) with CT scanning
- Tracer specific for activated T-cells
- Study included 24 participants with documented COVID-19, imaged between 27 days to 2.5 years post-infection
- Some participants had long COVID symptoms (up to 15 symptoms), while others had fully recovered
- Pre-COVID healthy controls were also included
- PET Imaging Results
- Increased T-cell activation observed in various tissues post-COVID:
- Nasopharyngeal lymphoid space
- Gut wall
- Bone marrow
- Lymph nodes
- Lung parenchyma
- Brain stem
- Spinal cord
- Adrenal tissue
- Persistence of T-cell activation seen up to two years post-infection
- Some decrease in signal over time, but still significantly higher than pre-COVID controls
- Modest association between vaccine timing and imaging results
- Suggestion of higher T-cell activation in symptomatic individuals
- COVID-19 vaccines do not appear to elicit the same long-term T-cell phenotype as initial infection
- Increased T-cell activation observed in various tissues post-COVID:
- Direct Tissue Analysis
- SARS-CoV-2 RNA persistence observed in tissue samples:
- Detected 158 days post-infection without known reinfection
- Found in lamina propria, some in macrophages and other immune cells
- Persistence seen up to 676 days post-infection
- Double-stranded RNA detected, suggesting ongoing viral life cycling or persistence
- Clusters of double-stranded RNA positive cells with immune infiltrate observed
- SARS-CoV-2 RNA persistence observed in tissue samples:
- Granuloma-like Structures ("Coronialoma")
- Dense clusters of double-stranded RNA positive cells observed
- These clusters are surrounded by immune infiltrate, including CD68+ macrophages
- The structure resembles a granuloma, leading to the coined term "coronialoma" or "viroma"
- These structures suggest areas of viral persistence that are eliciting inflammation but evading immune clearance
- Viral Persistence and Reactivation
- Potential intersection between SARS-CoV-2 RNA and EBV (Epstein-Barr Virus) transcriptional activity in the gut
- Hypothesis of EBV reactivation potentially linked to SARS-CoV-2 replication in tissues
- Ongoing deeper investigation into the relationship between SARS-CoV-2, EBV, and other viruses
- Digital Spatial Omics Profiling
- Using Xenium 10x system for deep transcriptomic analysis
- Integrating SARS-CoV-2, EBV, CMV, HIV, and other viral transcripts
- Analyzing up to 500 transcripts for both virus and host
- Observed transcriptional differences in tissues between long COVID and non-long COVID individuals
- Unique patterns in macrophages near infected cells:
- Upregulation of genes inhibiting granzyme B activity
- Inhibition of natural killer cell activation
- Downregulation of genes important for tissue defense response
- Reduced granzyme B production observed in areas directly infected with SARS-CoV-2
- Hypothesis and Potential Treatment
- SARS-CoV-2 evades innate and adaptive immune responses in tissue, leading to viral persistence
- Chronic inflammation induced despite evasion
- Need to boost tissue-based immune recognition and removal of infected cells
- INTERRUPT-LC Trial
- Using IL-15 agonist super-agonist (N-803), recently approved for bladder cancer
- Stimulates CD8+ T cells, NK cells, and peripheral immune cell function
- Helps immune cells traffic to recognize and kill infected cells
- Two doses given approximately two weeks apart
- Aims to reduce infected cells in viral reservoirs and improve symptoms
- Called "No Gain No Pain" study due to temporary inflammation post-injection
- Will assess both reduction in viral reservoir and symptomatic improvement
- Conclusion
- The LIINC study is conducting deep, comprehensive work
- The immunotherapy trial with N-803 represents a paradigm shift in treating infection-associated chronic disease
- Acknowledgment of the team's efforts, particularly Michael Peluso's leadership in clinical aspects