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Humoral immune responses to COVID-19 vaccination in people living with HIV receiving suppressive antiretroviral therapy

Authors :
Landon Young
Marianne Harris
Silvia Guillemi
Kieran Atkinson
Chanson J. Brumme
Daniel T. Holmes
Cecilia T. Costiniuk
Peter Cheung
Aslam H. Anis
Julio S. G. Montaner
Mark A. Brockman
F. Harrison Omondi
Yurou Sang
Bruce Ganase
Victor C. M. Leung
Laura Burns
Gisele Umviligihozo
Hesham Ali
Hope R. Lapointe
Mari L. DeMarco
Paul Sereda
Siobhan Ennis
Masahiro Niikura
Francis M Mwimanzi
Fatima Yaseen
Junine Toy
Ralph Pantophlet
Sarah Speckmaier
Rolando Barrios
Mark Hull
Nadia Moran-Garcia
Curtis Cooper
Maggie C. Duncan
Olga Agafitei
Rebecca Kalikawe
Zabrina L. Brumme
Simran Basra
Malcolm Hedgcock
Li Yi Lim
Marc G. Romney
Janet Simons
Hanwei Sudderuddin
Kurtis Ng
Source :
medRxiv, article-version (status) pre, article-version (number) 2
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Humoral responses to COVID-19 vaccines in people living with HIV (PLWH) remain incompletely understood. We measured circulating antibodies against the receptor-binding domain (RBD) of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, ACE2 displacement and live viral neutralization activities one month following the first and second COVID-19 vaccine doses in 100 adult PLWH and 152 controls. All PLWH were receiving suppressive antiretroviral therapy, with median CD4+ T-cell counts of 710 (IQR 525-935) cells/mm3. Nadir CD4+ T-cell counts ranged as low as 3. After adjustment for sociodemographic, health and vaccine-related variables, HIV infection was significantly associated with 0.2 log10 lower anti-RBD antibody concentrations (p=0.03) and ∼11% lower ACE2 displacement activity (p=0.02), but not lower viral neutralization (p=0.1) after one vaccine dose. Following two doses however, HIV was no longer significantly associated with the magnitude of any response measured. Rather, older age, a higher burden of chronic health conditions, and having received two ChAdOx1 doses (versus a heterologous or dual mRNA vaccine regimen) were independently associated with lower responses. After two vaccine doses, no significant correlation was observed between the most recent or nadir CD4+ T-cell counts and vaccine responses in PLWH. These results suggest that PLWH with well-controlled viral loads on antiretroviral therapy and CD4+ T-cell counts in a healthy range will generally not require a third COVID-19 vaccine dose as part of their initial immunization series, though other factors such as older age, co-morbidities, vaccine regimen type, and durability of vaccine responses will influence when this group may benefit from additional doses. Further studies of PLWH who are not receiving antiretroviral treatment and/or who have low CD4+ T-cell counts are needed.

Details

ISSN :
20590105
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
NPJ vaccines
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ed5964b1bb024b68abb2ba59df3c875c