Thymosin alpha 1 restores the immune homeostasis in lymphocytes during Post-Acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Minutolo. Antonella A; Petrone. Vita V; Fanelli. Marialaura M; Maracchioni. Christian C; Giudice. Martina M; Teti. Elisabetta E; Coppola. Luigi L; Sorace. Chiara C; Iannetta. Marco M; Tony Miele. Martino M; Bernardini. Sergio S; Mastino. Antonio A; Sinibaldi Vallebona. Paola P; Balestrieri. Emanuela E; Andreoni. Massimo M; Sarmati. Loredana L; Grelli. Sandro S; Garaci. Enrico E; Matteucci. Claudia C
Key Findings
- Thymosin‑alpha‑1 restores lymphocyte (especially T‑cell) numbers in post‑acute COVID‑19 patients
- The benefit is strongest in people who had severe disease and needed respiratory support
- Treatment also improved systemic and psychiatric symptoms linked to long COVID
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers dealing with long COVID, thymosin‑alpha‑1 looks promising as an immune‑reset tool, but the research is still early and doesn’t give clear dosing or safety guidelines. Consider it experimental and discuss with a healthcare professional before trying.
Summary
The study shows that thymosin‑alpha‑1 can help fix the messed‑up immune system seen in people with long COVID, especially those who were very sick during the infection, by boosting low‑count T‑cells and improving some lingering physical and mental symptoms.
Abstract
The complex alterations of the immune system and the immune-mediated multiorgan injury plays a key role in host response to SARS-CoV-2 infection and in the pathogenesis of COVID-19, being also associated with adverse outcomes. Thymosin alpha 1 (Tα1) is one of the molecules used in the treatment of COVID-19, as it is known to restore the homeostasis of the immune system during infections and cancer. The use of Tα1 in COVID-19 patients had been widely used in China and in COVID-19 patients, it has been shown to decrease hospitalization rate, especially in those with greater disease severity, and reduce mortality by restoring lymphocytopenia and more specifically, depleted T cells. Persistent dysregulation with depletion of naive B and T cell subpopulations and expansion of memory T cells suggest a chronic stimulation of the immune response in individuals with post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC). Our data obtained from an ex vivo study, showed that in PASC individuals with a chronically altered immune response, Tα1 improve the restoration of an appropriate response, most evident in those with more severe illness and who need respiratory support during acute phase, and in those with specific systemic and psychiatric symptoms of PASC, confirming Tα1 treatment being more effective in compromised patients. The results obtained, along with promising reports on recent trials on Tα1 administration in patients with COVID-19, offer new insights into intervention also for those patients with long-lasting inflammation with post-infectious symptoms, some of which have a delayed onset.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-03-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.intimp.2023.110055
10
58