4.7 Article

Serum Neutralizing Antibody Titers 12 Months After COVID-19 Messenger RNA Vaccination: Correlation to Clinical Variables in an Adult, US Population

Journal

CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 76, Issue 3, Pages E391-E399

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciac416

Keywords

SARS-CoV-2; mRNA vaccine; immune response; neutralization assay; impact on outcome; clinical variables; COVID-19

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Multiple clinical factors affect the strength and duration of immune responses after COVID-19 vaccination. Malignancy reduces the immune response after the third dose, indicating the need for clinically guided vaccine dosing regimens.
Multiple clinical factors affect the half maximal inhibitory concentration strength and duration after primary series vaccination. All subjects, regardless of prior coronavirus disease infection, had enhanced neutralization following the third dose. Malignancy decreased response after the third dose, suggesting the importance of clinically guided vaccine-dosing regimens. Background We studied whether comorbid conditions affect strength and duration of immune responses after severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) messenger RNA vaccination in a US-based, adult population. Methods Sera (before and after BNT162b2 vaccination) were tested serially up to 12 months after 2 doses of vaccine for SARS-CoV-2-anti-Spike neutralizing capacity by pseudotyping assay in 124 individuals; neutralizing titers were correlated to clinical variables with multivariate regression. Postbooster (third dose) effect was measured at 1 and 3 months in 72 and 88 subjects, respectively. Results After completion of primary vaccine series, neutralizing antibody half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) values were high at 1 month (14-fold increase from prevaccination), declined at 6 months (3.3-fold increase), and increased at 1 month postbooster (41.5-fold increase). Three months postbooster, IC50 decreased in coronavirus disease (COVID)-naive individuals (18-fold increase) and increased in prior COVID 2019 (COVID-19+) individuals (132-fold increase). Age >65 years (beta = -0.94, P = .001) and malignancy (beta = -0.88, P = .002) reduced strength of response at 1 month. Both neutralization strength and durability at 6 months, respectively, were negatively affected by end-stage renal disease ([beta = -1.10, P = .004]; [beta = -0.66, P = .014]), diabetes mellitus ([beta = -0.57, P = .032]; [beta = -0.44, P = .028]), and systemic steroid use ([beta = -0.066, P = .032]; [beta = -0.55, P = .037]). Postbooster IC50 was robust against WA-1 and B.1.617.2. Postbooster neutralization increased with prior COVID-19 (beta = 2.9, P < .0001), and malignancy reduced neutralization response (beta = -0.68, P = .03), regardless of infection status. Conclusions Multiple clinical factors affect the strength and duration of neutralization response after primary series vaccination, but not the postbooster dose strength. Malignancy was associated with lower booster-dose response regardless of prior COVID infection, suggesting a need for clinically guided vaccine regimens.

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