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  • Bourhis, Maryam; Idir, Abderrazak; Machraoui, Safa; Hachimi, Abdelhamid; Elouardi, Youssef; Jamil, Oumayma; Khallouki, Mohammed; Zahlane, Kawtar; Guennouni, Morad; Hazime, Raja; Essaadouni, Lamiaa; Lourhlam, Bouchra; Ennaji, Moulay Mustapha; Mouse, Hassan Ait; Admou, Brahim; Zyad, Abdelmajid

    Cytokine (Philadelphia, Pa.), 08/2024, Volume: 180
    Journal Article

    COVID-19 is a viral infection that disturbs the host's immune system and causes an overproduction of cytokines leading to a cytokine storm. The present study aimed to evaluate the serum levels of 27 protein biomarkers to determine their association with COVID-19 disease severity. The serum levels of 89 patients with different degrees of COVID-19 disease severity asymptomatic (n = 14), moderate (n = 14), severe (n = 30), and critical (n = 31) and 14 healthy individuals were tested for a panel of 27 cytokines and chemokines using Luminex assay (27 Bio‑Plex Pro Human Cytokine, Bio-rad™). IL-12, IL-2 and IL-13, as well as IL-17 and GM-CSF were clearly undetectable in asymptomatic patients. IL-8 levels were higher in asymptomatic compared with other groups. Very high levels of IL-6, IL-10 and the chemokines MIP-1α, MCP-1 and IP10 were associated with disease progression, while IL-4 tends to decrease with disease severity. Our study provides more evidence that excessive cytokine synthesis is linked to the disease progression.