Author: Cosgrove, Peter R.; Redhu, Naresh S.; Tang, Ying; Monuteaux, Michael C.; Horwitz, Bruce H.
Title: Characterizing T cell subsets in the nasal mucosa of children with acute respiratory symptoms Cord-id: l5ir2l1z Document date: 2021_1_27
ID: l5ir2l1z
Snippet: BACKGROUND: In infants admitted to an ICU with respiratory failure, there is an association between the ratio of CD8(+) to CD4(+) T cells within the upper respiratory tract and disease severity. Whether this ratio is associated with respiratory disease severity within children presenting to a pediatric emergency department is not known. METHODS: We studied a convenience sample of 63 children presenting to a pediatric emergency department with respiratory symptoms. T cell subsets in the nasal muc
Document: BACKGROUND: In infants admitted to an ICU with respiratory failure, there is an association between the ratio of CD8(+) to CD4(+) T cells within the upper respiratory tract and disease severity. Whether this ratio is associated with respiratory disease severity within children presenting to a pediatric emergency department is not known. METHODS: We studied a convenience sample of 63 children presenting to a pediatric emergency department with respiratory symptoms. T cell subsets in the nasal mucosa were analyzed by flow cytometry. We compared CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells subsets in these samples and analyzed the proportion of these subsets that expressed markers associated with tissue residency. RESULTS: We were able to identify major subsets of CD8 and CD4 T cells within the nasal mucosa using flocked swabs. We found no difference in the ratio CD8(+) to CD4(+) T cells in children with upper or lower respiratory illness. A positive association between tissue-resident memory T cell frequency and patient age was identified. CONCLUSIONS: In our patient populations, the CD8(+):CD4(+) ratio was not associated with disease severity. The majority of T cells collected on nasal swabs are antigen experienced, and there is an association between the frequency of tissue-resident T cells and age. IMPACT: Immune cell populations from the nasal mucosa can be captured using flocked nasal swabs and analyzed by flow cytometry. Nasal CD8(+):CD4(+) ratio does not predict respiratory illness severity in children presenting to the emergency department. The frequency of CD8(+) and CD4(+) resident memory T cells within the nasal mucosa increases with age.
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