id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-273587-nja58vxw Rendeiro, A. F. Longitudinal immune profiling of mild and severe COVID-19 reveals innate and adaptive immune dysfunction and provides an early prediction tool for clinical progression 2020-09-09 .txt text/plain 8910 467 46 By profiling mild and severe COVID-19 patients and healthy donors with flow cytometry, we demonstrate that SARS-CoV-2 is associated with broad dysregulation of the circulating immune system, characterized by the relative loss of lymphoid cells coupled to expansion of myeloid cells. While we observed no significant differences in the relative abundance of KIR receptors among COVID-19 patients with mild disease and healthy controls (Figure 3f) , a significantly higher proportion of cells expressed CD158i (NKG2A) in severe patients compared with mild or convalescent individuals. Despite the backdrop of a relative decrease in B cell numbers as disease progresses, we observed only a mild, non-significant increase in plasmacytoid cells in patients with severe COVID-19 compared with healthy donors (Figure 4a) . The resulting network of significant effects identified several clinical factors associated with specific immune cell populations, highlighting how age, sex, and disease severity jointly influence the circulating immune systems in patients with COVID-19 (Figure 6a) . ./cache/cord-273587-nja58vxw.txt ./txt/cord-273587-nja58vxw.txt