A randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled trial of IL-7 in critically ill COVID-19 patients.

Publication date: Feb 04, 2025

Lymphopenia and failure of lymphocytes to mount an early IFN-γ response correlate with increased mortality in COVID-19. Given the essential role of CD4 helper and CD8 cytotoxic cells in eliminating viral pathogens, this profound loss in lymphocytes may impair patients’ ability to eliminate the virus. IL-7 is a pleiotropic cytokine that is obligatory for lymphocyte survival and optimal function. We conducted a prospective, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of CYT107, recombinant human IL-7, in 109 critically-ill lymphopenic COVID-19 patients. The primary endpoint was to assess CYT107’s effect on lymphocyte recovery with secondary clinical endpoints including safety, ICU and hospital length-of-stay, incidence of secondary infections, and mortality. CYT107 was well-tolerated without precipitating a cytokine storm or worsening pulmonary function. Absolute lymphocyte counts increased in both groups without significant difference between CYT107 and placebo. COVID-19 patients receiving CYT107 but not concomitant antiviral medications, known inducers of lymphopenia, had a final lymphocyte count that was 43% greater than placebo (p=0. 067). There were significantly fewer treatment-emergent adverse events in CYT107 versus placebo-treated patients (p

Concepts Keywords
Blind Clinical trials
Cd4 COVID-19
Lymphopenia Immunotherapy
Recombinant Infectious disease
Viral

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH critically ill
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH Lymphopenia
disease IDO role
disease MESH secondary infections
disease MESH cytokine storm
disease MESH Infectious disease
pathway REACTOME Infectious disease

Original Article

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