4.5 Article

Potent high-avidity neutralizing antibodies and T cell responses after COVID-19 vaccination in individuals with B cell lymphoma and multiple myeloma

Journal

NATURE CANCER
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages 81-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s43018-022-00502-x

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This observational study analyzed the immune response to COVID-19 vaccination in individuals with hematologic malignancies, specifically B cell lymphomas and multiple myeloma. Despite lower levels of antibodies, these individuals showed rapid development of potent infection neutralization capacities against different variants of concern. Additionally, robust T cell responses were observed, leading to mainly mild to moderate breakthrough infections. The study suggests that COVID-19 vaccination can induce broad antiviral immunity, including ultrapotent neutralizing antibodies, in patients with hematologic malignancies.
Individuals with hematologic malignancies are at increased risk for severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), yet profound analyses of COVID-19 vaccine-induced immunity are scarce. Here we present an observational study with expanded methodological analysis of a longitudinal, primarily BNT162b2 mRNA-vaccinated cohort of 60 infection-naive individuals with B cell lymphomas and multiple myeloma. We show that many of these individuals, despite markedly lower anti-spike IgG titers, rapidly develop potent infection neutralization capacities against several severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 variants of concern (VoCs). The observed increased neutralization capacity per anti-spike antibody unit was paralleled by an early step increase in antibody avidity between the second and third vaccination. All individuals with hematologic malignancies, including those depleted of B cells and individuals with multiple myeloma, exhibited a robust T cell response to peptides derived from the spike protein of VoCs Delta and Omicron (BA.1). Consistently, breakthrough infections were mainly of mild to moderate severity. We conclude that COVID-19 vaccination can induce broad antiviral immunity including ultrapotent neutralizing antibodies with high avidity in different hematologic malignancies.

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