| Literature DB >> 34087242 |
David Hagin1, Tal Freund2, Michal Navon3, Tami Halperin4, Dikla Adir2, Rotem Marom4, Inbar Levi4, Shira Benor2, Yifat Alcalay2, Natalia T Freund5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In mid-December 2020, Israel started a nationwide mass vaccination campaign against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). In the first few weeks, medical personnel, elderly citizens, and patients with chronic diseases were prioritized. As such, patients with primary and secondary immunodeficiencies were encouraged to receive the vaccine. Although the efficacy of RNA-based COVID-19 vaccines has been demonstrated in the general population, little is known about their efficacy and safety in patients with inborn errors of immunity (IEI).Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; CVID; HIES; IEI; Inborn errors of immunity; NFKB1; PIDD; Pfizer-BioNTech; SARS-CoV-2; STAT1-GOF; STAT3-LOF; XLA; inhibiting antibodies; primary immunodeficiency disorders; vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34087242 PMCID: PMC8168345 DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2021.05.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Allergy Clin Immunol ISSN: 0091-6749 Impact factor: 10.793
Patient characteristics
| Patient no. | Age (y) | Sex | Underlying diagnosis | Genetics | Clinical manifestations/complications | IgRT | Immunomodulator/antibiotic |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 40 | M | XLA | c.3G>A; p.M1I | Bronchiectasis | Y | None |
| 2 | 51 | M | XLA | c.952T>C; p.S318P | Bronchiectasis and conjunctivitis | Y | None |
| 3 | 49 | M | XLA | Yes | Y | None | |
| 4 | 42 | M | XLA | c.1631+1G>T | Bronchiectasis, | Y | None |
| Rit | 56 | F | Hypogammaglobulinemia | No | ↓Ig, B-cell lymphopenia, myasthenia gravis | Y | Rituximab |
| 5 | 37 | M | STAT1-GOF mutation | c.1310C>T; pT437I | CMC, recurrent oral ulcers | N | Ruxolitinib |
| 6 | 21 | F | ALPS-like disease | LAD, ITP, AIN, AIHA | N | Rapamycin | |
| 7 | 51 | M | CVID/ALPS-like disease | N | ↓Ig, LAD, pulmonary HTN, s/p splenectomy for ITP | Y | Prophylactic co-trimoxazole |
| 8 | 41 | M | STAT3-LOF mutation (HIES) | c.1144C>T; p.R382W | Pneumatocele, s/p partial lobectomy, after AVR d/t MRSA endocarditis | Y | Co-trimoxazole and azithromycin |
| 9 | 48 | M | CID | Negative | ↓Ig, massive splenomegaly, s/p DLBCL (-3 y) | Y | Prophylactic co-trimoxazole |
| 10 | 32 | F | NFKB1-HI | c.509TinsGGTGCAA; p.L170ins exon 7/24fs | Hypogammaglobulinemia, LAD, AIN | N | None |
| 11 | 72 | M | NFKB1-HI | None | N | None | |
| 12 | 36 | F | Complete C4 deficiency | Yes | Cryoglobulinemia, ↓Ig | Y | Rituximab (-2 y) |
| 13 | 27 | F | Selective IgG2 deficiency | No | ↓Ig, recurrent pneumonia | Y | None |
| 14 | 37 | F | CVID | No | ↓Ig, aHUS, recurrent pneumonia | Y | None |
| 15 | 38 | M | CVID | No | ↓Ig, IBD-like | Y | None |
| 16 | 39 | F | CVID | No | ↓Ig, NRH | Y | None |
| 17 | 45 | F | CVID | No | ↓Ig, T1D, lymphocytic infiltrates on GI biopsy specimens | Y | None |
| 18 | 46 | F | CVID | Negative | ↓Ig, recurrent pneumonia, history of Crohn-like disease | Y | None (azathioprine in the past) |
| 19 | 50 | F | CVID | No | ↓Ig, vitiligo | Y | None |
| 20 | 59 | F | CVID | No | ↓Ig | Y | None |
| 21 | 60 | F | CVID | No | ↓Ig, s/p breast cancer | Y | None |
| 22 | 64 | F | CVID | No | ↓Ig, IBD-like | Y | None |
| 23 | 65 | F | CVID | No | ↓Ig | Y | None |
| 24 | 67 | F | CVID | No | ↓Ig | Y | None |
| 25 | 72 | M | Hypogammaglobulinemia | No | ↓Ig | N | None |
| 26 | 73 | F | CVID | Negative | ↓Ig, lung nodules, sarcoma | Y | None |
| Con | 37 | F | Selective IgG1 and IgG3 deficiency | No | ↓Ig, recurrent pneumonia | Y | None |
aHUS, Atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome; AIHA, autoimmune hemolytic anemia; AIN, autoimmune neutropenia; AVR, aortic valve replacement; CMC, chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis; Con, convalescent; DLBCL, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma; d/t, due to; F, female; GI, gastrointestinal; HIES, hyper IgE syndrome; HTN, hypertension; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; ↓Ig, hypogammaglobulinemia; IgRT, immunoglobulin replacement therapy; ITP, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura; LAD, lymphadenopathy; M, male; N, No; NRH, nodular regenerative hyperplasia; Rit, After rituximab; s/p, status post; STAT3-LOF, STAT3 loss-of-function; T1D, type I diabetes; VUS, Variant of uncertain significance; Y, yes.
Genetically confirmed but patient preferred to not publish the pathogenic variant.
Fig 1Humoral anti-S response: general. Anti–SARS-CoV2 humoral response was evaluated 2 weeks following a second vaccine dose. A, Titers of prevaccinated donors (B) (pink [n = 11]), donors with IEI (IEI) (bordeaux [n = 26]), healthy vaccinated donors (HV) (yellow [n = 11]), and recently convalescent mildly affected healthy donors (HC) (green [n = 4]) are shown. Dotted line marks a titer threshold of 150 AU/mL, with higher titers considered positive. Of note, the anti-S antibody titers of vaccinated individuals were higher than those of convalescent donors, whereas the samples from patients with IEI showed significant variability. B, Values of the AUC for anti-RBD IgG are shown. Here too, vaccinated individuals had higher anti-RBD titers than did convalescent donors (n = 13 HC). C, Inhibition percentage of RBD-ACE2 binding by donors’ sera. Zero inhibition was set on the basis of the average value of the patients before vaccination. The 1-way ANOVA test was performed for statistical analysis. D, Pie charts representing the division of each group according to different anti-RBD IgG titers. E, Correlation between IgG AUC and sera inhibition for all donors is shown. Correlation was calculated by a simple linear regression test. All analyses were calculated using GraphPad software.
Fig 2Groups of patients with IEI and a humoral anti-S response. A, Subdividing IEI according to different disease categories showed that as expected, all B-negative donors (4 donors with XLA and 1 post–rituximab treatment donor) tested negative for anti-S antibodies. In addition, younger patients with CVID (n = 7) showed a trend toward higher titers than older patients with CVID (n = 7), and older patients with CVID had lower titers of anti-S antibodies than healthy vaccinated donors. B and C, Values of the AUC for anti-RBD IgG and inhibition percentage of RBD-ACE2 binding by donors’ sera are shown. Zero inhibition was set on the basis of the average value of the patients before vaccination. For simplicity, data for only postvaccination IEI donors are shown. Here too, younger patients with CVID had higher anti-RBD titers and showed higher inhibition compared with older patients with CVID. For statistical analysis, an unpaired Student t test between younger and older groups of CVID patients was performed.
Fig 3Cellular response. A, Number of ELISpot dots per well for prevaccinated donors (B) (n = 7), recently convalescent mildly affected donors (n = 4), healthy vaccinated donors (n = 11) (HV), donors with IEI (n = 26), and 1 convalescent patient with IEI are shown. Similar to what was observed with anti-S antibody titers, healthy vaccinated donors showed a trend toward a higher number of IL-2/IFN-γ spots than convalescent individuals. Dotted line marks a threshold of 4 spots per well, which we considered positive on the basis of samples from prevaccinated and convalescent individuals. B, Dividing IEI according to different disease categories showed a stronger cellular response in B-negative patients (4 donors with XLA and 1 post–rituximab treatment donor) compared with healthy vaccinated donors (average 58.6 vs 12.55 [P = .0073]) or with B-cell–positive IEI donors (average 58.6 vs 15.35 [P = .0056]). A 1-way ANOVA test was performed for the statistical analysis. For the purpose of logarithmic presentation, 0 points are presented with a value of 0.01. HC, Recently convalescent mildly affected healthy donor.
Fig 5T-cell immunophenotyping of 5 T-cell nonresponders. T-cell immunophenotyping of prevaccine samples that were available for 5 of the 7 nonresponders IEI patients showed that 4 of 5 donors had an abnormal CD4/CD8 ratio of less than 0.8. All 5 donors had a normal absolute lymphocyte count without CD4 lymphopenia.
Fig 4B-negative ELISpot results. Images of S-pool–stimulated (upper images) and M-pool–stimulated (lower images) PBMCs are shown. A, Strong cellular response with a high number of IL-2/IFN-γ spots can be clearly seen in PBMCs samples of XLA1, XLA2, XLA4, and rituximab-treated donors. B and C, Images of 7 younger (aged <50 years) healthy vaccinated (HV) individuals (B) and 5 convalescent (Con) donors (C) are shown as controls. One of the convalescent samples is from a selective IgG1 and IgG3-deficient patient (IEI-Con).