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Trimer IgG and neutralising antibody response to COVID-19 mRNA vaccination in individuals with sarcoidosis

BACKGROUND: Individuals with sarcoidosis are at higher risk for infection owing to underlying disease pathogenesis and need for immunosuppressive treatment. Current knowledge as to how subjects with sarcoidosis respond to different forms of vaccination is limited. We examined quantitative and functi...

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Autores principales: Vagts, Christen L., Chang, Yi-Shin, Ascoli, Christian, Lee, Jessica M., Huang, Kai, Huang, Yue, Cherian, Ruth A., Sarup, Nandini, Warpecha, Samantha R., Edafetanure-Ibeh, Russell, Amin, Md-Ruhul, Sultana, Tasmin, Ghassemi, Mahmood, Sweiss, Nadera J., Novak, Richard, Perkins, David L., Finn, Patricia W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: European Respiratory Society 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9501840/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36601311
http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00025-2022
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author Vagts, Christen L.
Chang, Yi-Shin
Ascoli, Christian
Lee, Jessica M.
Huang, Kai
Huang, Yue
Cherian, Ruth A.
Sarup, Nandini
Warpecha, Samantha R.
Edafetanure-Ibeh, Russell
Amin, Md-Ruhul
Sultana, Tasmin
Ghassemi, Mahmood
Sweiss, Nadera J.
Novak, Richard
Perkins, David L.
Finn, Patricia W.
author_facet Vagts, Christen L.
Chang, Yi-Shin
Ascoli, Christian
Lee, Jessica M.
Huang, Kai
Huang, Yue
Cherian, Ruth A.
Sarup, Nandini
Warpecha, Samantha R.
Edafetanure-Ibeh, Russell
Amin, Md-Ruhul
Sultana, Tasmin
Ghassemi, Mahmood
Sweiss, Nadera J.
Novak, Richard
Perkins, David L.
Finn, Patricia W.
author_sort Vagts, Christen L.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Individuals with sarcoidosis are at higher risk for infection owing to underlying disease pathogenesis and need for immunosuppressive treatment. Current knowledge as to how subjects with sarcoidosis respond to different forms of vaccination is limited. We examined quantitative and functional antibody response to COVID-19 vaccination in infection-naive subjects with and without sarcoidosis. METHODS: Our prospective cohort study recruited 14 subjects with biopsy-proven sarcoidosis and 27 age–sex matched controls who underwent a two-shot series of the BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Baseline, 4-week and 6-month trimer spike protein IgG and neutralising antibody (nAb) titres were assessed. Correlation and multivariate regression analysis was conducted. RESULTS: Sarcoidosis subjects had a significant increase in short-term antibody production to a level comparable to controls; however, IgG titres significantly declined back to baseline levels by 6 months. Corresponding neutralising assays revealed robust nAb titres in sarcoidosis subjects that persisted at 6 months. A significant and strong correlation between IgG and nAb titres across all time points was observed in the control group. However within the sarcoidosis group, a significant but weak correlation between antibody levels was found. Overall, IgG levels were poor predictors of nAb titres at short- or long-term time points. CONCLUSIONS: Sarcoidosis subjects exhibit nAb induced by the BNT162b2 mRNA SARS-CoV-2 vaccine at levels comparable to controls that persists at 6 months indicating conferred immunity. Trimer IgG levels are poor predictors of nAb in subjects with sarcoidosis. Studies of further antibody immunoglobulins and subtypes warrant investigation.
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spelling pubmed-95018402022-09-26 Trimer IgG and neutralising antibody response to COVID-19 mRNA vaccination in individuals with sarcoidosis Vagts, Christen L. Chang, Yi-Shin Ascoli, Christian Lee, Jessica M. Huang, Kai Huang, Yue Cherian, Ruth A. Sarup, Nandini Warpecha, Samantha R. Edafetanure-Ibeh, Russell Amin, Md-Ruhul Sultana, Tasmin Ghassemi, Mahmood Sweiss, Nadera J. Novak, Richard Perkins, David L. Finn, Patricia W. ERJ Open Res Original research articles BACKGROUND: Individuals with sarcoidosis are at higher risk for infection owing to underlying disease pathogenesis and need for immunosuppressive treatment. Current knowledge as to how subjects with sarcoidosis respond to different forms of vaccination is limited. We examined quantitative and functional antibody response to COVID-19 vaccination in infection-naive subjects with and without sarcoidosis. METHODS: Our prospective cohort study recruited 14 subjects with biopsy-proven sarcoidosis and 27 age–sex matched controls who underwent a two-shot series of the BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Baseline, 4-week and 6-month trimer spike protein IgG and neutralising antibody (nAb) titres were assessed. Correlation and multivariate regression analysis was conducted. RESULTS: Sarcoidosis subjects had a significant increase in short-term antibody production to a level comparable to controls; however, IgG titres significantly declined back to baseline levels by 6 months. Corresponding neutralising assays revealed robust nAb titres in sarcoidosis subjects that persisted at 6 months. A significant and strong correlation between IgG and nAb titres across all time points was observed in the control group. However within the sarcoidosis group, a significant but weak correlation between antibody levels was found. Overall, IgG levels were poor predictors of nAb titres at short- or long-term time points. CONCLUSIONS: Sarcoidosis subjects exhibit nAb induced by the BNT162b2 mRNA SARS-CoV-2 vaccine at levels comparable to controls that persists at 6 months indicating conferred immunity. Trimer IgG levels are poor predictors of nAb in subjects with sarcoidosis. Studies of further antibody immunoglobulins and subtypes warrant investigation. European Respiratory Society 2023-01-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9501840/ /pubmed/36601311 http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00025-2022 Text en Copyright ©The authors 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This version is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Licence 4.0. For commercial reproduction rights and permissions contact permissions@ersnet.org (mailto:permissions@ersnet.org)
spellingShingle Original research articles
Vagts, Christen L.
Chang, Yi-Shin
Ascoli, Christian
Lee, Jessica M.
Huang, Kai
Huang, Yue
Cherian, Ruth A.
Sarup, Nandini
Warpecha, Samantha R.
Edafetanure-Ibeh, Russell
Amin, Md-Ruhul
Sultana, Tasmin
Ghassemi, Mahmood
Sweiss, Nadera J.
Novak, Richard
Perkins, David L.
Finn, Patricia W.
Trimer IgG and neutralising antibody response to COVID-19 mRNA vaccination in individuals with sarcoidosis
title Trimer IgG and neutralising antibody response to COVID-19 mRNA vaccination in individuals with sarcoidosis
title_full Trimer IgG and neutralising antibody response to COVID-19 mRNA vaccination in individuals with sarcoidosis
title_fullStr Trimer IgG and neutralising antibody response to COVID-19 mRNA vaccination in individuals with sarcoidosis
title_full_unstemmed Trimer IgG and neutralising antibody response to COVID-19 mRNA vaccination in individuals with sarcoidosis
title_short Trimer IgG and neutralising antibody response to COVID-19 mRNA vaccination in individuals with sarcoidosis
title_sort trimer igg and neutralising antibody response to covid-19 mrna vaccination in individuals with sarcoidosis
topic Original research articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9501840/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36601311
http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00025-2022
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