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Patients Recently Treated for B-lymphoid Malignancies Show Increased Risk of Severe COVID-19.

Authors :
Rubinstein SM
Bhutani D
Lynch RC
Hsu CY
Shyr Y
Advani S
Mesa RA
Mishra S
Mundt DP
Shah DP
Sica RA
Stockerl-Goldstein KE
Stratton C
Weiss M
Beeghly-Fadiel A
Accordino M
Assouline SE
Awosika J
Bakouny Z
Bashir B
Berg S
Bilen MA
Castellano CA
Cogan JC
Kc D
Friese CR
Gupta S
Hausrath D
Hwang C
Johnson NA
Joshi M
Kasi A
Klein EJ
Koshkin VS
Kuderer NM
Kwon DH
Labaki C
Latif T
Lau E
Li X
Lyman GH
McKay RR
Nagaraj G
Nizam A
Nonato TK
Olszewski AJ
Polimera HV
Portuguese AJ
Puc MM
Razavi P
Rosovski R
Schmidt A
Shah SA
Shastri A
Su C
Torka P
Wise-Draper TM
Zubiri L
Warner JL
Thompson MA
Source :
Blood cancer discovery [Blood Cancer Discov] 2022 May 05; Vol. 3 (3), pp. 181-193.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Patients with B-lymphoid malignancies have been consistently identified as a population at high risk of severe COVID-19. Whether this is exclusively due to cancer-related deficits in humoral and cellular immunity, or whether risk of severe COVID-19 is increased by anticancer therapy, is uncertain. Using data derived from the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19), we show that patients treated for B-lymphoid malignancies have an increased risk of severe COVID-19 compared with control populations of patients with non-B-lymphoid malignancies. Among patients with B-lymphoid malignancies, those who received anticancer therapy within 12 months of COVID-19 diagnosis experienced increased COVID-19 severity compared with patients with non-recently treated B-lymphoid malignancies, after adjustment for cancer status and several other prognostic factors. Our findings suggest that patients recently treated for a B-lymphoid malignancy are at uniquely high risk for severe COVID-19.<br />Significance: Our study suggests that recent therapy for a B-lymphoid malignancy is an independent risk factor for COVID-19 severity. These findings provide rationale to develop mitigation strategies targeted at the uniquely high-risk population of patients with recently treated B-lymphoid malignancies. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 171.<br /> (©2022 American Association for Cancer Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2643-3249
Volume :
3
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Blood cancer discovery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35262738
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2643-3230.BCD-22-0013