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Cytokine Blockade Attenuates Inflammation and Improves Depressive Psychopathology After COVID-19: A Naturalistic Observational Study

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2025
Citazione:
Cytokine Blockade Attenuates Inflammation and Improves Depressive Psychopathology After COVID-19: A Naturalistic Observational Study / Palladini, M., Azzalin, A.A., Bessi, M., De Lorenzo, R., Rovere-Querini, P., Benedetti, F., Mazza, M.G.. - In: JOURNAL OF NEUROIMMUNE PHARMACOLOGY. - ISSN 1557-1890. - 20:1(2025). [10.1007/s11481-025-10247-w]
Abstract:
Current insight on inflammation in psychiatry suggests that perturbation of inflammatory set points could foster psychopathology and recent evidence support immune-inflammatory mechanisms as targets for antidepressant pharmacology. In the present naturalistic observational study we evaluated the possible effect of the cytokine-blocking agents in preventing the development of post-COVID depression in a large sample of survivors also exploring the relationship between post-COVID depressive risk, treatment with cytokine-blocking agents, and innate immune response markers. 588 COVID-19 survivors were included, of them 374 received the best available treatment at the time and 131 received standard treatment combined with cytokine-blocking agents (anakinra, tocilizumab, sarilumab, reparixin and mavrilimumab). Post-COVID depressive psychopathology was evaluated at short (34.6 ± 17.39 days) and long term (126.76 ± 61.4 days) follow-ups. The systemic inflammation index as (neutrophils*platelets)/lymphocytes was computed in a subgroup of 274 patients. COVID-19 survivors who were treated with cytokine-blocking agents experienced less severe depressive symptomatology and, simultaneously, less susceptibility to develop clinically relevant depression. Moreover, the longitudinal investigations, revealed that patients treated with cytokine-blocking agents underwent a spontaneous symptoms relief over time. Systemic inflammation index decrease over hospitalization was found to affect the susceptibility to long-term depression. Finally, we observed that cytokine-blocking agents’ impact on depression was mediated by lowering of systemic inflammation. Our findings indicate potential efficacy of cytokine-blocking agent treatment during the early stages of COVID-19, mitigating post-COVID depressive symptoms by attenuating systemic inflammation. Further investigation through preclinical and clinical studies is warranted to elucidate immune-inflammatory pathways as viable targets for antidepressant psychopharmacology.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Palladini, M.; Azzalin, A. A.; Bessi, M.; De Lorenzo, R.; Rovere-Querini, P.; Benedetti, F.; Mazza, M. G.
Autori di Ateneo:
BENEDETTI FRANCESCO
ROVERE QUERINI PATRIZIA
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.unisr.it/handle/20.500.11768/197082
Pubblicato in:
JOURNAL OF NEUROIMMUNE PHARMACOLOGY
Journal
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https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11481-025-10247-w
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