Additional booster doses in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia induce humoral and cellular immune responses to SARS-CoV-2 similar to natural infection regardless ongoing treatments: A study by ERIC, the European Research Initiative on CLL.
Alessandro CampanellaA CapassoS HeltaiC TaccettiE AlbiYair HerishanuS HaggenburgT ChatzikonstantinouMichael DoubekM KättströmKrzysztof GiannopoulosM SimkovicC MorenoM MassaiaH BumbeaSalem AlShemmariP RanghettiE PerottaF MartiniE Sant'AntonioM ColiaC CombiShai LeviA P KaterM HazenbergI S NijhofQ HofsinkC DemosthenousJ KotaskovaJ ZaleskaF VrbackyA Mora RayaD BisognoI E TripoliV M PopovV RomanN StavroyianniM KarypidouE ScaranoM LocatelliM FrenquelliLydia ScarfòK StamatopoulosP GhiaPublished in: American journal of hematology (2024)
Profound immune dysregulation and impaired response to the SARS-CoV-2 vaccine put patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) at risk of severe COVID-19. We compared humoral memory and T-cell responses after booster dose vaccination or breakthrough infection. (Green) Quantitative determination of anti-Spike specific antibodies. Booster doses increased seroconversion rate and antibody titers in all patient categories, ultimately generating humoral responses similar to those observed in the postinfection cohort. In detail, humoral response with overscale median antibody titers arose in >80% of patients in watch and wait, off-therapy in remission, or under treatment with venetoclax single-agent. Anti-CD20 antibodies and active treatment with BTK inhibitors (BTKi) represent limiting factors of humoral response, still memory mounted in ~40% of cases following booster doses or infection. (Blue) Evaluation of SARS-CoV-2-specific T-cell responses. Number of T-cell functional activation markers documented in each patient. The vast majority of patients, including those seronegative, developed T-cell responses, qualitatively similar between treatment groups or between vaccination alone and infection cases. These data highlight the efficacy of booster doses in eliciting T-cell immunity independently of treatment status and support the use of additional vaccination boosters to stimulate humoral immunity in patients on active CLL-directed treatments.
Keyphrases
- immune response
- sars cov
- chronic lymphocytic leukemia
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- coronavirus disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- stem cells
- inflammatory response
- combination therapy
- working memory
- case report
- high resolution
- patient reported outcomes
- mass spectrometry
- patient reported
- liquid chromatography