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    SARS-COV-2 vaccine responses in renal patient populations

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    Author
    Cheung, Chee Kay
    Keyword
    Antibody
    Autoimmune
    Dialysis
    Immunosuppression
    Mycophenolate
    Rituximab
    SARS-CoV-2
    Transplant
    Vaccine
    Date
    2022-05-31
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1186/s12882-022-02792-w
    Publisher's URL
    https://bmcnephrol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12882-022-02792-w
    Abstract
    Background: Dialysis patients and immunosuppressed renal patients are at increased risk of COVID-19 and were excluded from vaccine trials. We conducted a prospective multicentre study to assess SARS-CoV-2 vaccine antibody responses in dialysis patients and renal transplant recipients, and patients receiving immunosuppression for autoimmune disease. Methods: Patients were recruited from three UK centres (ethics:20/EM/0180) and compared to healthy controls (ethics:17/EE/0025). SARS-CoV-2 IgG antibodies to spike protein were measured using a multiplex Luminex assay, after first and second doses of Pfizer BioNTech BNT162b2(Pfizer) or Oxford-AstraZeneca ChAdOx1nCoV-19(AZ) vaccine. Results: Six hundred ninety-two patients were included (260 dialysis, 209 transplant, 223 autoimmune disease (prior rituximab 128(57%)) and 144 healthy controls. 299(43%) patients received Pfizer vaccine and 379(55%) received AZ. Following two vaccine doses, positive responses occurred in 96% dialysis, 52% transplant, 70% autoimmune patients and 100% of healthy controls. In dialysis patients, higher antibody responses were observed with the Pfizer vaccination. Predictors of poor antibody response were triple immunosuppression (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]0.016;95%CI0.002-0.13;p < 0.001) and mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) (aOR0.2;95%CI 0.1-0.42;p < 0.001) in transplant patients; rituximab within 12 months in autoimmune patients (aOR0.29;95%CI 0.008-0.096;p < 0.001) and patients receiving immunosuppression with eGFR 15-29 ml/min (aOR0.031;95%CI 0.11-0.84;p = 0.021). Lower antibody responses were associated with a higher chance of a breakthrough infection. Conclusions: Amongst dialysis, kidney transplant and autoimmune populations SARS-CoV-2 vaccine antibody responses are reduced compared to healthy controls. A reduced response to vaccination was associated with rituximab, MMF, triple immunosuppression CKD stage 4. Vaccine responses increased after the second dose, suggesting low-responder groups should be prioritised for repeated vaccination. Greater antibody responses were observed with the mRNA Pfizer vaccine compared to adenovirus AZ vaccine in dialysis patients suggesting that Pfizer SARS-CoV-2 vaccine should be the preferred vaccine choice in this sub-group.
    Citation
    Smith, R. M., Cooper, D. J., Doffinger, R., Stacey, H., Al-Mohammad, A., Goodfellow, I., Baker, S., Lear, S., Hosmilo, M., Pritchard, N., Torpey, N., Jayne, D., Yiu, V., Chalisey, A., Lee, J., Vilnar, E., Cheung, C. K., & Jones, R. B. (2022). SARS-COV-2 vaccine responses in renal patient populations. BMC nephrology, 23(1), 199. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-022-02792-w
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/16227
    Collections
    Renal and Transplant

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