| Literature DB >> 33563499 |
Markus Cornberg1, Maria Buti2, Christiane S Eberhardt3, Paolo Antonio Grossi4, Daniel Shouval5.
Abstract
According to a recent World Health Organization estimate, the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic, which originated in China in 2019, has spread globally, infecting nearly 100 million people worldwide by January 2021. Patients with chronic liver diseases (CLD), particularly cirrhosis, hepatobiliary malignancies, candidates for liver transplantation, and immunosuppressed individuals after liver transplantation appear to be at increased risk of infections in general, which in turn translates into increased mortality. This is also the case for SARS-CoV-2 infection, where patients with cirrhosis, in particular, are at high risk of a severe COVID-19 course. Therefore, vaccination against various pathogens including SARS-CoV-2, administered as early as possible in patients with CLD, is an important protective measure. However, due to impaired immune responses in these patients, the immediate and long-term protective response through immunisation may be incomplete. The current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has led to the exceptionally fast development of several vaccine candidates. A small number of these SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidates have already undergone phase III, placebo-controlled, clinical trials in healthy individuals with proof of short-term safety, immunogenicity and efficacy. However, although regulatory agencies in the US and Europe have already approved some of these vaccines for clinical use, information on immunogenicity, duration of protection and long-term safety in patients with CLD, cirrhosis, hepatobiliary cancer and liver transplant recipients has yet to be generated. This review summarises the data on vaccine safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy in this patient population in general and discusses the implications of this knowledge on the introduction of the new SARS-CoV-2 vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Cirrhosis; Influenza; Liver transplantation; SARS-CoV-2; Vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33563499 PMCID: PMC7867401 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhep.2021.01.032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hepatol ISSN: 0168-8278 Impact factor: 25.083
Efficacy of vaccines in patients with chronic liver diseases (examples).
| Vaccine | Response in patients with chronic liver diseases | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Seasonal influenza vaccine | Patients with cirrhosis (n = 20) had a lower response rate (75–85% | |
| Meta-analysis of 12 studies: effective antibody response may reduce the risk of all-cause hospitalisation in patients with chronic liver diseases (most patients had chronic viral hepatitis). | ||
| Patients with cirrhosis (n = 45) had a significant increase of IgA and IgG antibodies against the 23-valent pneumococcal vaccine at 1 month compared to baseline, however, larger decline in IgA and IgM at 6 months compared to controls. | ||
| Hepatitis A vaccine | Serum anti-HAV concentrations were significantly lower in patients with decompensated cirrhosis (n = 35) than in patients with cirrhosis (n = 49). Patients with Child-Pugh A had adequate responses (71% after the first and 98% after the booster dose). Child-Pugh class was the only factor predicting response to vaccination. | |
| Hepatitis B vaccine | Patients with chronic liver diseases (n = 166, 34% cirrhosis) had lower response rates. Nine (26%) of 34 cirrhotic patients who received Engerix-B and 10 (45%) of 22 cirrhotic patients who received HeplisavB achieved immunity. | |
| Systematic review of 11 studies: Lower rate of seroconversion in patients with chronic hepatitis C compared to healthy controls, both in cirrhotic and non-cirrhotic patients. | ||
| Patients with cirrhosis on the waiting list for liver transplantation (n = 49) had low antibody responses (28%) compared to 97% for healthy controls (n = 113). | ||
| Patients with cirrhosis on the waiting list (n = 62) had low antibody responses (44% after 1st vaccine schedule, 62% after 2nd schedule) |
Efficacy and safety of vaccines in transplant recipients (examples).
| Vaccine | Type of study/population | Response in transplant recipients | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seasonal influenza vaccine | Systematic review of 36 studies | High variability of the response. Overall a 10% to 16% lower response rate in SOT recipients | |
| Meta-analysis with 8 studies (SOT patients): | Transplant recipients receiving MMF had a significantly lower response rate. | ||
| Systematic review of 7 studies (SOT patients) | Heterogenous responses. Despite alternative influenza vaccination strategies, seroconversion and seroprotection rates for influenza antigens were lower in SOT patients. | ||
| Systematic review of 9 studies | A booster dose of the influenza vaccine did not effectively enhance immunogenicity in renal transplant recipients. | ||
| Systematic review and meta-analysis | 15 studies reported influenza-like illness with comparable rates between vaccinated transplant patients and immunocompetent controls. | ||
| Mumps, measles, and rubella vaccine | Systematic review of 4 studies (SOT patients): | Heterogenous responses. Overall, the observed positive response rates were above 70% in all but 1 study. | |
| Adjuvanted subunit varicella zoster vaccine | Systematic review of 6 studies (immunocompromised adults aged 18-49 years): | Significant humoral and cellular immune responses even in patients with the highest level of immunosuppression (sustained for at least 24 weeks); no safety concern, no evidence of graft rejection compared to placebo groups. | |
| Hepatitis A vaccine | Systematic review of 17 studies (immunosuppressed patients | Heterogenous responses; lowest immune response in transplanted patients using multiple immunosuppressive drugs, especially after only 1 dose of vaccine. | |
| Hepatitis B vaccine | Systematic review of 7 studies (SOT patients): | Low response rates in adult SOT recipients (6.7% to 36%) but higher response rate in the paediatric trials (63.6% to 100%) | |
| Systematic review of 9 studies (SOT patients): | Overall response ranged from 32% to 100% with comparable responses in the control group, if included. | ||
| Tetanus vaccine | Systematic review of 6 studies (SOT patients): | High rate of responders in SOT recipients with conventional immunosuppression with no significant difference to healthy controls. Lower response in patients with anti-CD20 treatment. | |
| Diphteria vaccine | Systematic review of 4 studies (SOT patients): | Comparable response rates in SOT recipients and controls. |
SOT, solid organ transplantation; MMF, mycophenolate mofetil.
Summary of data for COVID-19 vaccines approved∗ to date (as of February 2021).
| Vaccine | Phase III data | Special features | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| BNT162b2 (Tozinameran; Comirnaty) | N = 43,548 (randomised 1:1 vaccine | 2 doses (30 μg) 21 days apart | |
| mRNA-1273 (Moderna) | N = 30,420 (randomised 1:1 vaccine | 2 doses (100 μg) 28 days apart | |
| ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 (AZD122) | Interim analysis (N = 11,636 from Brazil, South Africa, UK) | 2 doses. A second dose could be given between 4 and 12 weeks after the first dose. Detailed storage information pending but expected to be less complex (stable at 2–8°C). The number of patients aged ≥70 years was low (3.8%). |
AE, adverse event; SAE, serious adverse event (grade 3); MenACWY, meningococcal group A, C, W, and Y conjugate vaccine. ∗by EMA or FDA (AZD122 so far only authorised in the UK, EMA/FDA approval was pending at submission of the manuscript).