New discovery explains why men more are more affected from severe COVID-19
NEWS
Researchers at Umeå University have found another piece of the puzzle that explains why there are differences in immune responses in women and men when they get sick with COVID-19. This discovery has implications for treatment strategies for severe COVID-19. The study is published in the scientific journal European Journal of Immunology.
Johan Normark och Constantin Urban, Institutionen för klinisk mikrobiologi vid Umeå universitet.
ImageMattias Pettersson
men are three times more likely to need intensive care
“Although the total number of cases of diagnosed COVID-19 is similar for men and women, men are three times more likely to need intensive care. Our study contributes to understanding how this sex-related difference in severe COVID-19 arises”, says Johan Normark, infectious disease physician and senior lecturer at the Department of Clinical Microbiology at Umeå University and one of the researchers behind the studies.
Non-existent to severe symptoms
COVID-19 is a respiratory infection caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The disease was first detected during the coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan, China, in December 2019. The rapid, global spread led to the COVID-19 pandemic.
At least a third of those infected do not experience any symptoms. Of those who do, 80 percent experience mild symptoms and 20 percent experience severe symptoms that may require hospitalization and oxygen support. A small proportion of these becomes critically ill and requires intensive care.
Severe COVID-19 infections are characterized by an exaggerated and hyperinflammatory reaction of the immune system, especially in the lungs. The severe response can lead to tissue damage and, in the worst case, death. Part of the immune response to COVID-19 is the recruitment and activation of special white blood cells, called neutrophils. Their recruitment and activation occur primarily through the secretion of immune system signaling molecules, called cytokines.
The underlying mechanisms of why men are at risk of becoming more seriously ill with COVID-19 are not fully known.
Physicians and researchers collaborate
To explore this, a translational project led by Professor Constantin Urban was started, where several research groups from Umeå University collaborated with partners at the university hospitals in Umeå and Örebro. Translational research aims to take what is learned in basic research and apply it to the development of solutions to medical problems.
In the study, blood samples from over 200 Swedish patients with COVID-19 were analyzed. Using the samples, doctoral student Remigius Gröning mapped a comprehensive cytokine profile and doctoral student Emelie Backman quantified molecules that indicate neutrophil activation.
Excessive activation of the immune system in men
The results showed that in the samples from patients with severe COVID-19 and needing medical care, there were higher values of cytokines that recruit and activate neutrophils. In addition, there were higher values of neutrophil activation markers.
“We saw that the increase in the inflammatory cytokine IL-18 was sex-dependent and that the activation of neutrophils was sex-dependent. This was our most interesting finding! On average, both the amount of this cytokine and neutrophil activation markers were higher in blood plasma from men with severe COVID-19 compared to blood plasma from women of the same category”, says Constantin Urban. Excessive recruitment and activation of neutrophils can have fatal consequences and can lead to serious and life-threatening disease.
According to the researchers, the result is important because other studies are underway that aim to treat symptoms of severe COVID-19 by suppressing neutrophil activation and thus reducing tissue damage in the patients' lungs.
“In order to further develop this treatment strategy, it is therefore tremendously important to precisely map the difference that occurs in neutrophil responses in men and women with severe COVID-19”, says Constantin Urban.
The immune system against viruses is complex
The study also highlights the complexity of the interactions that characterize the immune system's response to viral infections and how these interactions can affect the severity of the disease. Neutrophils have previously been studied most in bacterial infections, but this study shows that they also play an important role in more severe viral infections.
In future studies, the research team intends to further delineate the molecular mechanisms behind the discovered sex-related differences in the COVID-19 response and to verify the results of the current study with larger patient groups.
The researchers Johan Normark and Constantin Urban plan to verify the results of the current study with larger patient groups.
ImageMattias Pettersson
About the scientific study
Backman E., et al: Elevated Plasma Levels of NET Components in Men with Severe COVID-19 Correlates to Increased Amounts of IL-18. European Journal of Immunology. 2025.
Anna Lange and Sara Cajander, Department of Medical Sciences, Örebro University and Örebro University Hospital Alicia Lind, Department of Diagnostics and Intervention, Umeå University and Umeå University Hospital Clas Ahlm, Mattias Forsell, Johan Normark, Department of Clinical Microbiology and Umeå University Hospital Constantin Urban, Department of Clinical Microbiology at Umeå University