Safety and immunogenicity of COVID-19 vaccination in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (CHESS-NMCID 2101): A multicenter prospective study.
Xiaolong QiJitao WangQiran ZhangJingwen AiChuan LiuQianqian LiYe GuJiaojian LvYifei HuangYanna LiuDan XuShubo ChenDengxiang LiuJinlong LiHuiling XiangJing LiangLi BianZhen ZhangLuxiang LiuXuying ZhangWei QinXiaodong WangZhiyun HouNina ZhangAiguo ZhangHongmei ZuYun WangZhaolan YanXiufang DuAifang HouJiansong JiJie YangJiansheng HuangZhongwei ZhaoShengqiang ZouHailei JiGuohong GeQing-Lei ZengWenhong ZhangPublished in: Journal of medical virology (2022)
Data on safety and immunogenicity of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccinations in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients are limited. In this multicenter prospective study, HCC patients received two doses of inactivated whole-virion COVID-19 vaccines. The safety and neutralizing antibody were monitored. Totally, 74 patients were enrolled from 10 centers in China, and 37 (50.0%), 25 (33.8%), and 12 (16.2%) received the CoronaVac, BBIBP-CorV, and WIBP-CorV, respectively. The vaccines were well tolerated, where pain at the injection site (6.8% [5/74]) and anorexia (2.7% [2/74]) were the most frequent local and systemic adverse events. The median level of neutralizing antibody was 13.5 (interquartile range [IQR]: 6.9-23.2) AU/ml at 45 (IQR: 19-72) days after the second dose of vaccinations, and 60.8% (45/74) of patients had positive neutralizing antibody. Additionally, lower γ-glutamyl transpeptidase level was related to positive neutralizing antibody (odds ratio = 1.022 [1.003-1.049], p = 0.049). In conclusion, this study found that inactivated COVID-19 vaccinations are safe and the immunogenicity is acceptable or hyporesponsive in patients with HCC. Given that the potential benefits may outweigh the risks and the continuing emergences of novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 variants, we suggest HCC patients to be vaccinated against COVID-19. Future validation studies are warranted.
Keyphrases
- coronavirus disease
- end stage renal disease
- sars cov
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- clinical trial
- machine learning
- climate change
- spinal cord injury
- patient reported outcomes
- neuropathic pain
- zika virus
- big data
- chronic pain
- genome wide
- cross sectional