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Tommaso Francesco Aiello; Jon Salmanton-Garcia; Francesco Marchesi; Barbora Weinbergerova; Andreas Glenthoj; Jens Van Praet; Francesca Farina; Julio Davila-Valls; Sonia Martín-Pérez; Shaimaa El-Ashwah; Martin Schönlein; Iker Falces-Romero; Jorge Labrador; Uluhan Sili; Caterina Buquicchio; Antonio Vena; Gaetan Plantefeve; Verena Petzer; Monika M. Biernat; Tobias Lahmer; Ildefonso Espigado; Jaap A. van Doesum; Ola Blennow; Klára Piukovics; Carlo Tascini; Michael Samarkos; Yavuz M. Bilgin; Luana Fianchi; Federico Itri; Toni Valkovic; Nicola S. Fracchiolla; Michelina Dargenio; Moraima Jimenez; Ferenc Magyari; Alberto Lopez-Garcia; Lucia Prezioso; Natasa Čolovic; Evgenii Shumilov; Ghaith Abu-Zeinah; Esperanza Lavilla-Rubira; Mario Virgilio Papa; Tomás-José Lopez-Gonzalez; László Imre Pinczes; Fatih Demirkan; Natasha Ali; Caroline Besson; Guillemette Fouquet; Alessandra Romano; Jose Angel Hernández-Rivas; Maria Ilaria del Principe; Avinash Aujayeb; Maria Merelli; Sylvain Lamure; Joyce Marques De Almeida; Maria Gomes da Silva; Noha Eisa; Joseph Meletiadis; Ikhwan Rinaldi; Olimpia Finizio; Ozren Jakšić; Mario Delia; Summiya Nizamuddin; Monia Marchetti; Marina Machado; Martin Cernan; Nicola Coppola; Eleni Gavriilaki; Chiara Cattaneo; Ana Groh; Zlate Stojanoski; Nurettin Erben; Nikola Pantic; Gustavo-Adolfo Mendez; Roberta Di Blasi; Stef Meers; Cristina De Ramon; Nathan C. Bahr; Ziad Emarah; Gina Varricchio; Milche Cvetanoski; Ramón Garcia-Sanz; Mirjana Mitrovic; Raphaël Lievin; Michaela Hanakova; Zdeněk Racil; Maria Vehreschild; Athanasios Tragiannidis; Raquel Nunes Rodrigues; Daniel Garcia-Bordallo; Raul Cordoba; Alba Cabirta; Anna Nordlander; Emanuele Ammatuna; Elena Arellano; Dominik Wolf; Romane Prin; Alessandro Limongelli; Martina Bavastro; Gökçe Melis Çolak; Stefanie K. Grafe; Ditte Stampe Hersby; Laman Rahimli; Oliver A. Cornely; Carolina Garcia-Vidal; Livio Pagano.
ssrn; 2023.
Preprint in English | PREPRINT-SSRN | ID: ppzbmed-10.2139.ssrn.4473151
3.
medrxiv; 2022.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppzbmed-10.1101.2022.04.08.22273602

ABSTRACT

ImportanceIn patients with hematologic malignancies, the immunogenicity of the standard 2-dose mRNA-1273 coronavirus disease 19 (COVID-19) vaccination schedule is often insufficient due to underlying disease and current or recent therapy. ObjectiveTo determine whether a 3rd mRNA-1273 vaccination raises antibody concentrations in immunocompromised hematology patients to levels obtained in healthy individuals after the standard 2-dose mRNA-1273 vaccination schedule. DesignProspective observational cohort study. SettingFour academic hospitals in the Netherlands. Participants584 evaluable immunocompromised hematology patients, all grouped in predefined cohorts spanning the spectrum of hematologic malignancies. ExposureOne additional vaccination with mRNA-1273 5 months after completion of the standard 2-dose mRNA-1273 vaccination schedule. Main Outcomes and MeasuresSerum IgG antibodies to spike subunit 1 (S1) antigens prior to and 4 weeks after each vaccination, and pseudovirus neutralization of wildtype, delta and omicron variants in a subgroup of patients. ResultsIn immunocompromised hematology patients, a 3rd mRNA-1273 vaccination led to median S1 IgG concentrations comparable to concentrations obtained by healthy individuals after the 2-dose mRNA-1273 schedule. The rise in S1 IgG concentration after the 3rd vaccination was most pronounced in patients with a recovering immune system, but potent responses were also observed in patients with persistent immunodeficiencies. Specifically, patients with myeloid malignancies or multiple myeloma, and recipients of autologous or allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) reached median S1 IgG concentrations similar to those obtained by healthy individuals after a 2-dose schedule. Patients on or shortly after rituximab therapy, CD19-directed chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy recipients, and chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients on ibrutinib were less or unresponsive to the 3rd vaccination. In the 27 patients who received cell therapy between the 2nd and 3rd vaccination, S1 antibodies were preserved, but a 3rd mRNA-1273 vaccination did not significantly enhance S1 IgG concentrations except for multiple myeloma patients receiving autologous HCT. A 3rd vaccination significantly improved neutralization capacity per antibody. Conclusions and RelevanceThe primary schedule for immunocompromised patients with hematologic malignancies should be supplemented with a delayed 3rd vaccination. B cell lymphoma patients and allogeneic HCT recipients need to be revaccinated after treatment or transplantation. Trial RegistrationEudraCT 2021-001072-41 Key pointsO_ST_ABSQuestionC_ST_ABSCan a 3rd mRNA-1273 vaccination improve COVID-19 antibody concentrations in immunocompromised hematology patients to levels similar to healthy adults after the standard 2-dose mRNA-1273 schedule? FindingsIn this prospective observational cohort study that included 584 immunocompromised hematology patients, a 3rd mRNA-1273 vaccination significantly improved SARS-CoV-2 antibody concentrations to levels not significantly different from those obtained by healthy individuals after the standard 2-dose mRNA-1273 vaccination schedule. Pseudovirus neutralization capacity per antibody of wild type virus and variants of concern also significantly improved. MeaningThe primary COVID-19 vaccination schedule for immunocompromised patients with hematologic malignancies should be supplemented with a delayed 3rd vaccination.


Subject(s)
Coronavirus Infections , Lymphoma, B-Cell , Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes , Leukemia, Lymphocytic, Chronic, B-Cell , Hematologic Neoplasms , COVID-19 , Multiple Myeloma
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