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Immune Responses to COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines in Patients with Solid Tumors on Active, Immunosuppressive Cancer Therapy

Authors :
Mladen Jergović
Pavani Chalasani
Bonnie LaFleur
Jennifer L. Uhrlaub
Tyler J. Ripperger
Shelby Dalgai
Ran Wei
Janko Nikolich-Zugich
Rebecca D Whitmer
Deepta Bhattacharya
Alexander Wolf
Amy Carrier
Marta V. Schoenle
Daniel Pennington
Grace Quirk
Michael Worobey
Hytham Hammad
Kameron L. Peyton
Ryan Sprissler
Aaron Scott
Michael D. Dake
Rachna T. Shroff
Source :
Nat Med, medRxiv, article-version (status) pre, article-version (number) 1
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 have shown high efficacy, but immunocompromised participants were excluded from controlled clinical trials. We compared immune responses to the Pfizer/BioNTech mRNA vaccine in solid tumor patients (n=53) on active cytotoxic anti-cancer therapy to a control cohort (n=50) as an observational study. Using live SARS-CoV-2 assays, neutralizing antibodies were detected in 67% and 80% of cancer patients after the first and second immunizations, respectively, with a 3-fold increase in median titers after the booster. Similar trends were observed in serum antibodies against the receptor-binding domain (RBD) and S2 regions of Spike protein, and in IFNγ+ Spike-specific T cells. Yet the magnitude of each of these responses was diminished relative to the control cohort. We therefore quantified RBD- and Spike S1-specific memory B cell subsets as predictors of anamnestic responses to additional immunizations. After the second vaccination, Spike-specific plasma cell-biased memory B cells were observed in most cancer patients at levels similar to those of the control cohort after the first immunization. We initiated an interventional phase 1 trial of a third booster shot (NCT04936997); primary outcomes were immune responses with a secondary outcome of safety. After a third immunization, the 20 participants demonstrated an increase in antibody responses, with a median 3-fold increase in virus-neutralizing titers. Yet no improvement was observed in T cell responses at 1 week after the booster immunization. There were mild adverse events, primarily injection site myalgia, with no serious adverse events after a month of follow-up. These results suggest that a third vaccination improves humoral immunity against COVID-19 in cancer patients on active chemotherapy with no severe adverse events.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9d4deee5ef10c37658ef39643ccaf919