key: cord-0701622-kh90pkzs authors: Sherman, Amy C; Desjardins, Michaël; Cheng, Chi-An; Bausk, Bruce; Izaguirre, Natalie; Zhou, Guohai; Krauss, Jonathan; Tolan, Nicole; Walt, David R; Soiffer, Robert; Ho, Vincent T; Issa, Nicolas C; Baden, Lindsey R title: Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Messenger RNA Vaccines in Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant Recipients: Immunogenicity and Reactogenicity date: 2021-11-02 journal: Clin Infect Dis DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciab930 sha: 2c1f5ce847f9e25c9a875992c0f01152db4d636e doc_id: 701622 cord_uid: kh90pkzs The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 messenger RNA vaccine–induced humoral response and reactogenicity profile are described in allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) recipients. Findings showed that 75.0% (by Simoa assay) or 80.0% (by Roche assay) of the HSCT cohort had a positive antibody response on series completion, compared with 100% in the healthy cohort. A prospective cohort study of allogeneic HSCT recipients and healthy participants age ≥18 years was conducted from December 2020 to June 2021 at Brigham and Women's Hospital and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, with institutional review board approval. All participants provided written informed consent. Participants received the 2-dose series of either mRNA-1273 or BNT162b2 under the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA's) emergency use authorization, via their care providers. Allogeneic HSCT recipients who were ≥100 days after transplantation were enrolled and asked to complete a 7-day symptom diary after each dose. Demographic and other information were captured from the electronic medical record. Blood samples were obtained at baseline, at the time of dose 2, and approximately 28 days after series completion. A FDAcleared multiplexed, single molecule array (Simoa) immunoassay measured anti-nucleocapsid (N), anti-spike (S), anti-S1, and anti-receptor-binding domain (RBD) immunoglobulin (Ig) G titers from plasma [6, 7] . The Simoa assay has a positivity threshold of 1.07 and 5.2 normalized average enzymes per bead (AEB) for anti-S IgG and anti-N IgG, respectively. Samples were also evaluated using the FDA-cleared Elecsys anti-SARS-CoV-2 and anti-SARS-CoV-2 S total antigen-capture (IgG, IgA, IgM) immunoassays on the cobas c602 module (Roche Diagnostics), detecting anti-S and anti-N total antibody from serum samples, with positivity thresholds of 0.8 U/mL and a 1.0 cutoff index, respectively [8] . Analyses included descriptive and graphic summaries. The Mann-Whitney test compared the magnitude of the antibody response for the HSCT cohort with that of the healthy cohort, with statistical significance set at a level of α = 0.05. Spearman correlation coefficients were calculated to compare the anti-S levels detected by the Simoa and Roche assays. Analyses were performed using R software (version 4.1.0 www.R-project.org/). A total of 24 healthy participants and 20 allogeneic HSCT recipients were enrolled. The median age was 24.0 and 66.0 years for the healthy and allogeneic HSCT cohorts; 54.2% and 50.0%, respectively, were female. The vaccine type was more likely to be mRNA-1273 (62.5%) in the healthy cohort and BNT162b2 (71.4%) in the HSCT cohort. In the HSCT cohort, the median duration after transplantation (interquartile range) was 173.0 (111.0-334.0) days, and 9 participants were prescribed corticosteroids and/or tacrolimus at the time of vaccination. Further disease and treatment characteristics for the HSCT recipients are described in Supplementary Table 1 . No participants in either cohort had a reported history of COVID-19 before enrollment or during the study, and no participants received intravenous immunoglobulin within 3 months of vaccination. Eighteen participants (18 of 20) completed the first dose diary, with reports of mild injection site pain ( . Participants who did not complete the entries initially reported no severe events during a follow-up safety call, and reactogenicity was collected retrospectively. No participants were hospitalized or died during the study period. The anti-N titers were negative for both the Simoa and Roche assays in all participants, indicating no SARS-CoV-2 infection before or during the study in either cohort. The median titer magnitudes of anti-S, anti-RBD, and anti-S1 IgG were all significantly higher in the healthy than in the HSCT cohort at the time of dose 2 (anti-S, 26.90 vs 1.11; anti-RBD, 11.53 vs 0.40; anti-S1, 21.22 vs 0.91 normalized average enzymes per bead; P < .001) and 28 days after series completion (anti-S, 65.70 vs 20.27; anti-RBD 90.04 vs 17.63; anti-S1, 136.39 vs 30.04 normalized average enzymes per bead; P < .001) for the Simoa assay, with similar findings for the Roche assay (anti-S, 233.60 vs 1.02 U/mL before dose 2 and 4435.00 vs 205.05 U/mL after series completion; both P < .001) (Figure 1) . The Spearman correlation between the Simoa and Roche assays for anti-S IgG/Ig was r = 0.89 (95% confidence interval, .81-.94) for the HSCT cohort and r = 0.92 (.87-.96) for the healthy cohort (Supplementary Figure 1) . All healthy participants had a positive anti-S antibody response after just 1 dose by both assays. In contrast, only 58.5% (Simoa) or 52.9% (Roche) of HSCT recipients responded after 1 dose. By 28 days after series completion, 75.0% (Simoa) or 80.0% (Roche) of the HSCT recipients responded and had an increased magnitude titer compared with the time of dose 2, suggesting that the second dose is essential to achieve a more robust antibody response. Interestingly, 5 HSCT recipients did not respond by series completion with the Simoa assay, compared with 4 as measured with the Roche assay. There was no clear trend based on the clinical history in terms of donor type, time from transplantation, HLA match, graft-vs-host disease prophylaxis, or steroid use among these nonresponders (Supplementary Table 2) . In summary, we described the SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccineinduced responses from baseline through approximately 28 days after series completion in a cohort of allogeneic HSCT recipients, using 2 serological assays with high concordance. Both mRNA vaccines were well tolerated with limited reactogenicity. Our data show that not all HSCT recipients mount a humoral response (75.0% with the Simoa and 80.0% with the Roche assay) 1 month after completing the vaccination series, which aligns with other findings described for allogeneic HSCT recipients [9] . Our study is unique in describing significantly lower magnitude of response after both 1 and 2 doses, compared with a healthy control group that had a 100% high-titer response. While there may be a potential benefit of additional vaccine doses for immunocompromised hosts [10, 11] , there are likely heterogenous host factors that affect response, as demonstrated by the disparate disease characteristics and treatments in our cohort. Allogeneic HSCT recipients who fail to produce antibodies after vaccination may have specific B-cell pathway defects that limit response, and thus additional doses may not necessarily augment antibody production. Our results also demonstrate the importance of orthogonal testing, especially in populations whose host immune responses may be altered. Without a clear reference standard established for SARS-CoV-2 antibody diagnostics, the discordant assay results (Simoa vs Roche) observed for the individuals in our study could reflect intrinsic differences in assay measurements or differences in host factors. If future policies (eg, additional booster doses or monoclonal antibodies) are based on antibody responses, the assays chosen should best reflect the immune status of the individual, with orthogonal testing perhaps the best approach. Our study has limitations. We did not evaluate vaccine efficacy, and in the absence of a known correlate of protection, protection against COVID-19 cannot be assessed solely from immunogenicity data. The sample is small and is not powered to detect significant differences in antibody response based on vaccine type, age, or disease or treatment characteristics. Effects of immunosenescence may have affected the results, since the median age was older for the HSCT cohort. However, immunogenicity data from the mRNA phase 1/2 trials demonstrated high binding IgG and neutralization responses in healthy, older individuals that were comparable to titers elicited by young adults [12] , and other studies have shown age-dependent decreased immunogenicity that was most significant in individuals >80 years old [13, 14] , whereas all of our participants were <80 years old. Further larger studies should assess the humoral response, neutralization titers, and clinical efficacy based on specific clinical characteristics that are likely to affect the immune system. A more in-depth understanding will aid in optimization of vaccine strategies, which may include specific timing after transplantation, additional vaccinations at targeted intervals between immunosuppression therapies, and/or deferring to other preventive options for individuals who are unable to produce an endogenous humoral response. , anti-S1 IgG (C), and anti-receptor-binding domain (RBD) IgG. E, F, Roche assay results for anti-N (E) and anti-S (F) total immunoglobulin (Ig) values at baseline (before vaccination), at dose 2, and 28 days after completion of the vaccine series. Thick horizontal bars and error lines represent medians and interquartile ranges, respectively, and dotted lines represent cutoff thresholds for each assay (Simoa assay: 1.07 normalized average enzymes per bead [AEB] for anti-S IgG and 5.2 normalized AEB for anti-N IgG [no thresholds determined for anti-RBD or anti-S1]; Roche assay: 0.8 U/mL for anti-S and 1.0 cutoff index [COI] for anti-N total immunoglobulin). All participants in the allogeneic HSCT and healthy cohorts had negative anti-N IgG (A) and anti-N total immunoglobulin (E) results throughout the study. P values represent comparisons between the allogeneic HSCT and healthy cohorts at dose 2 and 28 days after series completion. All temporal values within the allogeneic HSCT or healthy cohort for anti-S, anti-S1, and anti-RBD (Simoa) and anti-S (Roche) represent significant differences (P < .001), indicating a significant rise in antibody magnitude from baseline to the time of dose 2, and from dose 2 to 28 days after series completion. 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Consisting of data provided by the authors to benefit the reader, the posted materials are not copyedited and are the sole responsibility of the authors, so questions or comments should be addressed to the corresponding author.