Disease- and Therapy-Specific impact on Humoral immune Responses to cOViD-19 Vaccination in Hematologic Malignancies

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Abstract

Coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) vaccine response data for patients with hematologic malignancy, who carry high risk for severe COVID-19 illness, are incomplete. In a study of 551 hematologic malignancy patients with leukemia, lymphoma, and multiple myeloma, anti–SARS-CoV-2 spike IgG titers and neutralizing activity were measured at 1 and 3 months from initial vaccination. Compared with healthy controls, patients with hematologic malignancy had attenuated antibody titers at 1 and 3 months. Furthermore, patients with hematologic malignancy had markedly diminished neutralizing capacity of 26.3% at 1 month and 43.6% at 3 months, despite positive seroconversion rates of 51.5% and 68.9% at the respective time points. Healthy controls had 93.2% and 100% neutralizing capacity at 1 and 3 months, respectively. Patients with leukemia, lymphoma, and multiple myeloma on observation had uniformly blunted responses. Treatment with Bruton tyrosine kinase inhibitors, venetoclax, phosphoinositide 3-kinase inhibitors, anti-CD19/CD20–directed therapies, and anti-CD38/B-cell maturation antigen–directed therapies substantially hindered responses, but single-agent immunomodulatory agents did not.

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Chung, D. J., Shah, G. L., Devlin, S. M., Ramanathan, L. V., Doddi, S., Pessin, M. S., … Knorr, D. A. (2021). Disease- and Therapy-Specific impact on Humoral immune Responses to cOViD-19 Vaccination in Hematologic Malignancies. Blood Cancer Discovery, 2(6), 568–576. https://doi.org/10.1158/2643-3230.BCD-21-0139

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