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Prior SARS-CoV2 infection in vaccinated solid organ transplant recipients induces potent neutralization responses against variants, including Omicron
Alok Choudhary; Mark Lerman; David Calianese; Salman Khan; Judson Hunt; Afzal Nikaein; Avi Z Rosenberg; Jonathan I Silverberg; Israel Zyskind; William Honnen; Dabbu Kumar Jaijyan; Erica Kalu; Abraham Pinter.
Affiliation
  • Alok Choudhary; Rutgers University
  • Mark Lerman; Medical City Dallas Hospital, Dallas, TX, USA
  • David Calianese; Rutgers University
  • Salman Khan; Medical City Dallas Hospital, Dallas, TX, USA
  • Judson Hunt; Medical City Dallas Hospital, Dallas, TX, USA
  • Afzal Nikaein; Texas Medical Specialty, Dallas, TX, USA
  • Avi Z Rosenberg; Johns Hopkins University
  • Jonathan I Silverberg; George Washington University
  • Israel Zyskind; NYU Langone Medical Center
  • William Honnen; Rutgers University, PHRI, NJMS, Newark, NJ, USA
  • Dabbu Kumar Jaijyan; Rutgers University, PHRI, NJMS, Newark, NJ, USA
  • Erica Kalu; Medical City Dallas Hospital, Dallas, TX, USA
  • Abraham Pinter; Rutgers University
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-22270607
ABSTRACT
Factors affecting functional antibody responses in solid organ transplant recipients (SOTRs) to current SARS-CoV2 vaccines are not well understood. Here, we measured vaccine-induced neutralizing activities against the D614G-CoV2 baseline virus and eight variants, including Omicron, in a panel of CoV2 infected- (n=13) and uninfected- (n=63) vaccinated kidney and heart transplant recipients. In the CoV2 uninfected-vaccinated subset, only 19% and 35% of two and three-dose vaccinated recipients respectively possessed minimally protective neutralizing plasma antibody titers (IC50>150) against D614G. In contrast, all of the CoV2 infected-vaccinated SOTRs who received two vaccine doses possessed titers exceeding minimal protection; 12/13 exhibiting strong protection (IC50>1600) against D614G with minimal increases provided by a third dose. Omicron was the most resistant variant only 10% of CoV2 uninfected-vaccinated SOTRs reached the minimally protective neutralization titer, while 76% of CoV2 infected-vaccinated SOTRs exceeded this value. These results indicate that prior infection and vaccination can induce highly protective antibody responses in many SOTRs, and identify important factors (shorter time since transplantation, prednisone administration, and African American ethnicity) that limit these responses. Overall, these results suggest factors to consider in establishing optimum COVID-19 vaccination strategies in these cohorts.
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Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Cohort_studies / Observational study / Prognostic study Language: English Year: 2022 Document type: Preprint
Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Cohort_studies / Observational study / Prognostic study Language: English Year: 2022 Document type: Preprint
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