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Preprint em Inglês | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-21260849

RESUMO

BackgroundHemodialyzed patients are at higher risk for COVID-19 and were prioritized in the Portuguese vaccination campaign MethodsWe performed a prospective, longitudinal, cohort analysis of 143 patients on hemodialysis and 143 age-matched controls along BTN162b2 vaccination. ELISA quantified anti-full-length Spike IgG, IgM and IgA levels prior to the first vaccine dose (t0); 3 weeks later (second dose, t1); and 3 weeks later (t2); 127 patients were re-evaluated140 (t3) and 180 days (t4) after the first dose. ResultsSeroconversion at t1 was remarkably low in patients, with positivity for anti-spike IgG, IgM and IgA antibodies of 29.4%, 12% and 41%, respectively, increasing to 90.9% (IgG) and 83.9% (IgA) in t2, (IgM remained unchanged). Below 70 years of age anti-spike IgG levels at t1 were significantly lower compared to age-matched controls and showed a profile similar to older individuals. Immunosuppression was associated with lower antibody responses (p=0.005 at t1; p=0.008 at t2). Previous unresponsiveness to hepatitis B vaccination (75/129, 58% of patients negative for anti-HBs antibodies) did not correlate with humoral unresponsiveness to BTN162b2. Anti-spike IgG, IgM and IgA positivity and antibody levels significantly decay at t3, with IgG levels showing further waning at t4. ConclusionsThe large majority of hemodialyzed patients showed IgG seroconversion upon BNT162b2 mRNA vaccination, albeit a sizable proportion of patients presented poor responses. Follow-up of antibody responses 180 days post vaccination unveiled significant decay of anti-spike antibodies and warrant close monitoring of COVID-19 infection and further studies on reinforced vaccination schedules in patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis.

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