The post ww1 situation of Egypt is quite complicated.
Before the world war Egypt was nominally a Ottoman province, but a de facto protectorate of the British empire. In 1914, the official ruler of Egypt the Khedive Abbas II, decided to side with the Ottomans in the Great war. The British who de facto ruled the region immediately deposed him in favor of his brother Hussein Kamel, who thereafter became the Sultan of Egypt. Shortly after Egypt becomes a British protectorate. At the end of the war there was therefore no sovereign Egyptian state who could partake in the negotiations of the treaty of Sevres. It's protector and other allied victors who did partake in this negotiation carved up the boons mentioned in the question.
This did however not mean that Egypt gained nothing from ww1 or the period straight after it. There was an Egyptian delegation that went to the Paris peace conference of 1919, but this delegation was promptly arrested and its leader Saad Zhaghlul exiled to Malta. Following this mass demonstrations and uprisings broke out in Egypt. This continued until 1922 when the British government formally recognized Egyptian independence, though still keeping full control of Sudan and kept a large influence in Egyptian affairs. But even with this caveat, this is still an important step to full independence.
Concluding, Egypt did not receive any prices after ww1, but regained at least nominally it's independence in the wars aftermath