4.4 Article

Immunogenicity of a Three-Dose Primary Series of mRNA COVID-19 Vaccines in Patients With Lymphoid Malignancies

Journal

OPEN FORUM INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 9, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofac417

Keywords

lymphoid malignancies; mRNA vaccines; primary series; SARS-CoV-2

Funding

  1. Chleck Foundation
  2. Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center, from the National Center for Advancing Translational Science [1UL1TR002541-01]
  3. Massachusetts Coalition for Pathogen Readiness (Mass-CPR) award via Harvard Medical School
  4. Boston Children's Hospital Department of Pediatrics

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Lymphoid malignancy patients have poorer immune responses to vaccines, but a 3-dose mRNA vaccine series can enhance anti-S IgG responses, with the third dose converting some previously seronegative patients.
Background Patients with lymphoid malignancies are at risk for poor coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-related outcomes and have reduced vaccine-induced immune responses. Currently, a 3-dose primary regimen of mRNA vaccines is recommended in the United States for immunocompromised hosts. Methods A prospective cohort study of healthy adults (n = 27) and patients with lymphoid malignancies (n = 94) was conducted, with longitudinal follow-up through completion of a 2- or 3-dose primary mRNA COVID vaccine series, respectively. Humoral responses were assessed in all participants, and cellular immunity was assessed in a subset of participants. Results The rate of seroconversion (68.1% vs 100%) and the magnitude of peak anti-S immunoglobulin G (IgG) titer (median anti-S IgG = 32.4, IQR = 0.48-75.0 vs median anti-S IgG = 72.6, IQR 51.1-100.1; P = .0202) were both significantly lower in patients with lymphoid malignancies compared to the healthy cohort. However, peak titers of patients with lymphoid malignancies who responded to vaccination were similar to healthy cohort titers (median anti-S IgG = 64.3; IQR, 23.7-161.5; P = .7424). The third dose seroconverted 7 of 41 (17.1%) patients who were seronegative after the first 2 doses. Although most patients with lymphoid malignancies produced vaccine-induced T-cell responses in the subset studied, B-cell frequencies were low with minimal memory cell formation. Conclusions A 3-dose primary mRNA series enhanced anti-S IgG responses to titers equivalent to healthy adults in patients with lymphoid malignancies who were seropositive after the first 2 doses and seroconverted 17.1% who were seronegative after the first 2 doses. T-cell responses were present, raising the possibility that the vaccines may confer some cell-based protection even if not measurable by anti-S IgG.

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