Literature DB >> 35385875

mRNA Vaccine Effectiveness Against Coronavirus Disease 2019 Hospitalization Among Solid Organ Transplant Recipients.

Jennie H Kwon1, Mark W Tenforde2, Manjusha Gaglani3, H Keipp Talbot4,5, Adit A Ginde6, Tresa McNeal3, Shekhar Ghamande3, David J Douin7, Jonathan D Casey4, Nicholas M Mohr8, Anne Zepeski8, Nathan I Shapiro9, Kevin W Gibbs10, D Clark Files10, David N Hager11, Arber Shehu11, Matthew E Prekker12, Sean D Caspers12, Matthew C Exline13, Mena Botros13, Michelle N Gong14, Alex Li14, Amira Mohamed14, Nicholas J Johnson15, Vasisht Srinivasan16, Jay S Steingrub17, Ithan D Peltan18, Samuel M Brown18, Emily T Martin19, Akram Khan20, Catherine L Hough20, Laurence W Busse21, Abhijit Duggal22, Jennifer G Wilson23, Cynthia Perez23, Steven Y Chang24, Christopher Mallow25, Randal Rovinski25, Hilary M Babcock1, Adam S Lauring26, Laura Felley26, Natasha Halasa27, James D Chappell27, Carlos G Grijalva5, Todd W Rice4, Kelsey N Womack28, Christopher J Lindsell29, Kimberly W Hart29, Adrienne Baughman30, Samantha M Olson2, Stephanie Schrag2, Miwako Kobayashi2, Jennifer R Verani2, Manish M Patel2, Wesley H Self28,30.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The study objective was to evaluate 2- and 3-dose coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) mRNA vaccine effectiveness (VE) in preventing COVID-19 hospitalization among adult solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients.
METHODS: We conducted a 21-site case-control analysis of 10 425 adults hospitalized in March to December 2021. Cases were hospitalized with COVID-19; controls were hospitalized for an alternative diagnosis (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2-negative). Participants were classified as follows: SOT recipient (n = 440), other immunocompromising condition (n = 1684), or immunocompetent (n = 8301). The VE against COVID-19-associated hospitalization was calculated as 1-adjusted odds ratio of prior vaccination among cases compared with controls.
RESULTS: Among SOT recipients, VE was 29% (95% confidence interval [CI], -19% to 58%) for 2 doses and 77% (95% CI, 48% to 90%) for 3 doses. Among patients with other immunocompromising conditions, VE was 72% (95% CI, 64% to 79%) for 2 doses and 92% (95% CI, 85% to 95%) for 3 doses. Among immunocompetent patients, VE was 88% (95% CI, 87% to 90%) for 2 doses and 96% (95% CI, 83% to 99%) for 3 doses.
CONCLUSIONS: Effectiveness of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines was lower for SOT recipients than immunocompetent adults and those with other immunocompromising conditions. Among SOT recipients, vaccination with 3 doses of an mRNA vaccine led to substantially greater protection than 2 doses.
© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; immunocompromised; solid organ transplantation; vaccine effectiveness

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35385875      PMCID: PMC9047160          DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiac118

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Infect Dis        ISSN: 0022-1899            Impact factor:   7.759


Postmarketing observational vaccine effectiveness (VE) studies have demonstrated excellent effectiveness of mRNA vaccines (including BNT-162b2 from Pfizer-BioNTech and mRNA-1273 from Moderna) for the prevention of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-associated hospitalization among immunocompetent people, generally with estimates of 85% or higher [1-6]. However, lower estimates of VE against hospitalization have been reported among people with immunocompromising conditions [7, 8]. This is an area of concern, because immunocompromised people, especially those severely immunocompromised such as solid organ transplant (SOT) recipients, are at increased risk of severe illness with COVID-19 [9]. Immunogenicity studies suggest that COVID-19 mRNA vaccines produce less robust immune responses among people who are immunocompromised [9-13]. Early clinical studies suggest this translates into lower VE for the prevention of severe COVID-19 among adults with immunocompromising conditions [7, 8, 14–16]. However, a greater understanding of VE for COVID-19 vaccines among immunocompromised populations is needed. Prior studies have largely pooled all patients with immunocompromising conditions together without consideration for the intensity of immunosuppression, producing VE results that may overestimate VE for the most severely immunocompromised people [8, 16]. In the United States, initial recommendations for people with moderate-to-severe immunocompromising conditions were 2 doses of an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine; this recommendation was updated to 3 doses on August 12, 2021, with a fourth dose currently recommended at least 3 months after the third dose as a vaccine booster [17]. Understanding the clinical protection provided by mRNA vaccines in immunocompromised populations is critically important for several reasons, including the following: helping guide decisions on the prophylactic use of anti-severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) monoclonal antibody therapies for vaccinated immunocompromised patients; informing recommendations regarding continued use of nonpharmaceutical preventative strategies, such as mask wearing, after vaccination; and informing recommendations for additional vaccine booster doses [9, 14, 18]. In this analysis, we estimated VE against COVID-19 hospitalization for 2-dose and 3-dose mRNA vaccine series among SOT recipients, a population that is typically severely immunocompromised and, therefore, potentially susceptible to severe COVID-19 despite prior vaccination. We also estimated 2-dose and 3-dose mRNA VE among adults with other types of immunocompromising conditions.

METHODS

Project Design

This work was conducted as part of an ongoing prospective COVID-19 surveillance program by the Influenza and Other Viruses in the Acutely Ill (IVY) Network (a full list of investigators and collaborators in the Influenza and other Viruses in the Acutely Ill (IVY) Network is available in Supplementary Appendix A) [8, 15], a collaboration among 21 United States hospitals in 18 states and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) coordinated from Vanderbilt University Medical Center. The IVY Network initiated participant enrollment for COVID-19 VE assessments on March 11, 2021 and has been iteratively publishing VE results (Supplementary Table S1). The current analysis evaluated participants enrolled from March 11, 2021 through December 15, 2021 and focused on SOT recipients. This period largely predated Omicron variant circulation in the United States. We utilized a test-negative case-control design to assess VE for mRNA vaccines to prevent COVID-19 hospitalization.

Patient Population and Data Collection

This work was determined to be a public health surveillance activity by all enrolling sites, Vanderbilt University Medical Center (coordinating center), and CDC (funder and government sponsor). Adult patients aged 18 years and older hospitalized at 21 IVY Network hospitals between March 11 and December 15, 2021 were included. As previously described [8, 16], and detailed in Supplementary, Appendix B, Section 1, case patients had COVID-19-like illness and a positive SARS-CoV-2 molecular (eg, reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction [RT-PCR]) or antigen test result in the clinical setting [8, 16]. COVID-19-like illness was defined as having 1 or more of the following: fever, cough, shortness of breath, loss of taste, loss of smell, use of respiratory support for the acute illness, or new pulmonary findings on chest imaging consistent with pneumonia. Control patients included (1) test-negative controls who were admitted with a COVID-19-like illness and tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 by a molecular assay and (2) syndrome-negative controls who were admitted without COVID-19-like illness and tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 by a molecular assay. In addition to clinical testing, nasal specimens were also collected from patients and tested for SARS-CoV-2 by RT-PCR at a central laboratory at Vanderbilt University Medical Center using standardized methods developed by CDC. Final case and control status was determined using both clinical testing and central laboratory results [8]. Thus, cases were patients hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed, symptomatic COVID-19, and controls were patients hospitalized without COVID-19. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 detected in the central laboratory with a cycle threshold <32 also underwent viral whole-genome sequencing at University of Michigan for lineage determination [8, 16]. Patients or their proxies were interviewed to obtain information about demographic characteristics, clinical history, and COVID-19 vaccination status, and structured medical record abstraction was used to collect information on chronic medical conditions and clinical outcomes [8, 16].

Classification of COVID-19 Vaccination Status

Receipt of COVID-19 vaccine doses was ascertained by participant interview, hospital medical records, state immunization registries, vaccination record cards, and provider and pharmacy records. A vaccine dose was classified as received if verified by source documentation or plausible self-report including dates and locations of vaccination. In this analysis, we evaluated VE of 2-dose and 3-dose mRNA vaccine regimens (BNT-162b2 from Pfizer-BioNTech or mRNA-1273 from Moderna). Thus, patients were included if they had received 2 mRNA vaccine doses, 3 prior doses, or were unvaccinated. Patients were classified as 2-dose recipients if they received 2 mRNA vaccine doses with the second dose received ≥14 days before illness onset in cases and test-negative controls or ≥19 days before admission in syndrome-negative controls. Patients were classified as 3-dose recipients if they received 3 mRNA vaccine doses with the third dose received ≥7 days before illness onset in cases and test-negative controls or ≥12 days before admission in syndrome-negative controls and after authorization of third doses by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which was August 12, 2021 for immunocompromised patients and September 22, 2021 for immunocompetent patients. Patients were classified as unvaccinated if they had never received any COVID-19 vaccine in their lifetimes. Patients were excluded from the analyses if they received 1 mRNA vaccine dose, 2 mRNA vaccine doses with the second dose <14 days before illness onset for cases and test-negative controls or <19 days before admission for syndrome-negative controls, a third mRNA vaccine dose before FDA authorization, or a COVID-19 vaccine not evaluated in this analysis (eg, Ad26.SOV.2 vaccine).

Classification of Immune Status

Data on immunocompromising conditions were collected via standardized medical record review. Using these data, patients were categorized into 1 of 3 mutually exclusive categories of immune status at the time of hospital admission: Group 1, SOT recipient; Group 2, other immunocompromising condition [8]; or Group 3, immunocompetent (details provided in Supplementary, Appendix B, Section 2). Older age was not considered an immunocompromising condition in this analysis. For SOT recipients, detailed information on type and date of organ transplant, organ transplanted (heart, lung, liver, pancreas, intestine, or mixed organs), immunosuppressive regimen at the time of hospital admission, and history of transplant rejection in the previous year were collected through detailed physician-level medical record review. The SOT recipients were excluded from the analysis if they were not on immunosuppressive medications (eg, due to renal graft failure) or the date of transplant was found to be after the illness onset date. Patients with other immunocompromising conditions besides solid organ transplantation and immunocompetent patients were used as comparator groups to show VE among SOT patients in the context of other, concurrently enrolled populations.

Outcomes

Our goals were to estimate mRNA VE against COVID-19 hospitalizations for SOT recipients and to describe in-hospital clinical outcomes for SOT recipients hospitalized with COVID-19. For VE calculations, hospitalization for COVID-19 (case status) versus hospitalization for another reason (control status) was the outcome of interest. For description of clinical course, outcomes included the following variables, ascertained during the index hospitalization through hospital day 28: in-hospital death, invasive mechanical ventilation, noninvasive ventilation, vasopressor use, new renal replacement therapy, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, and hospital length of stay.

Statistical Analysis

Vaccine effectiveness against COVID-19 hospitalization was calculated using multivariable logistic regression. The dependent variable was case versus control status, with the control group including both test-negative and syndrome-negative controls. The primary independent variable was vaccination status classified into 3 groups, including unvaccinated (the reference group), vaccinated with 2 doses, or vaccinated with 3 doses. Models used to estimate VE included the following prespecified covariables: admission date (categorized in biweekly intervals), US Department of Health and Human Services geographic region, age, sex, and race/ethnicity [8, 16]. Vaccine effectiveness was calculated as follows: (1 – adjusted odds ratio [aOR]) × 100), with the aOR representing the odds of vaccination (2 doses versus unvaccinated or 3 doses versus unvaccinated) among cases compared with controls derived from the logistic regression model. Separate VE estimates were calculated for each of the 3 immune status groups (SOT recipients, other immunocompromising conditions, immunocompetent). For other non-SOT immunocompromising conditions, stratified VE estimates were calculated for common immunocompromised subgroups, including patients with active hematologic malignancy, active solid organ malignancy, and either rheumatologic conditions or inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). As a sensitivity analysis to account for the potential of SOT recipients being hospitalized for less severe COVID-19 than immunocompetent patients, VE estimates were calculated after restricting cases to those with hypoxemia at hospital admission, defined as SpO2 <92% or treated with supplemental oxygen within 24 hours of admission. All VE results were presented as pooled analyses including both COVID-19 mRNA vaccines available in the United States (BNT-162b2 and mRNA-1273). Two-dose and 3-dose VE estimates were compared using the pwcompare function in Stata, with a 2-sided P < .05 considered statistically significant. In-hospital clinical outcomes among COVID-19 case patients were compared across the 3 immune status groups, stratified by vaccination status. Analyses were conducted using STATA (release 16; StataCorp) and RStudio (version 1.2).

RESULTS

Patients

Between March 11, 2021 and December 15, 2021, 12 514 patients were enrolled across 21 hospitals. After 2089 patients were excluded (575 for receiving a COVID-19 vaccine other than an mRNA vaccine or unknown vaccine product, 873 for not being in an included vaccination group, and 641 for other reasons), 10 425 patients were included in this analysis (Figure 1). The analytical population included 440 patients in Group 1 (SOT recipients), 1684 patients in Group 2 (other immunocompromising condition), and 8301 patients in Group 3 (immunocompetent) (Table 1). Among 4970 COVID-19 cases, 2263 (46%) had a SARS-CoV-2 lineage identified; the most common lineages were the Delta variant (n = 1856, 82%) and the Alpha variant (n = 247, 11%).
Figure 1.

Flow diagram of patient participation.

Table 1.

Participant Characteristics

CharacteristicGroup 1: Solid Organ Transplant RecipientsGroup 2: Other Immunocompromising ConditionGroup 3: Immunocompetent
Cases (n = 230)Controls (n = 210)Cases (n = 589)Controls (n = 1095)Cases (n = 4151)Controls (n = 4150)
Age in Years, No. (%)
 18–4949 (21)55 (26)137 (23)229 (21)1574 (38)1040 (25)
 50–6495 (41)81 (39)214 (36)371 (34)1295 (31)1225 (30)
 ≥6586 (37)74 (35)238 (40)495 (45)1282 (31)1885 (45)
Female sex, No. (%)87 (38)98 (47)305 (52)597 (55)1919 (46)2037 (49)
Race/ethnicity, No. (%)
 Non-Hispanic White132 (57)125 (60)360 (61)690 (63)2139 (52)2496 (60)
 Non-Hispanic Black53 (23)38 (18)133 (23)221 (20)907 (22)885 (21)
 Hispanic, any race27 (12)33 (16)75 (13)135 (12)814 (20)530 (13)
 Other18 (8)14 (7)21 (4)49 (4)291 (7)239 (6)
Census region, No. (%)
 Northeast18 (8)17 (8)79 (13)146 (13)705 (17)625 (15)
 South69 (30)67 (32)235 (40)411 (38)1623 (39)1667 (40)
 Midwest79 (34)60 (29)191 (32)293 (27)954 (23)943 (23)
 West64 (28)66 (31)84 (14)245 (22)869 (21)915 (22)
Hypoxemic at hospital admissiona147/221 (67)87/168 (52)352/550 (64)450/830 (54)3014/3957 (76)1717/2878 (60)
Vaccinated with 2 or 3 doses of mRNA vaccine, No. (%)164 (71)160 (76)254 (43)756 (69)766 (18)2596 (63)
 2 doses140 (85)118 (74)235 (93)646 (85)744 (97)2455 (95)
 3 doses24 (15)42 (26)19 (7)110 (15)22 (3)141 (5)
Among Vaccinated, Product Received
 BNT162b2 (Pfizer-BioNTech)98 (60)95 (59)164 (65)441 (58)506 (66)1498 (58)
 mRNA-1273 (Moderna)65 (40)63 (39)89 (35)313 (41)257 (34)1091 (42)
 Mixed products1 (0.6)2 (1)1 (0.4)2 (0.3)3 (0.4)7 (0.3)
Among vaccinated with 2 doses, days between dose 2 and illness onset, median (IQR)134.5 (93.5–179)113.5 (64–155)163 (114–208)127 (71–182)170 (125–210)128 (77–184)
Among vaccinated with 3 doses, days between dose 3 and illness onset, median (IQR)49 (22–71)64.5 (33–83)34 (23–55)36 (17–56)29 (12–54)27 (14–38)
Immunocompromising Conditions
 Solid organ transplantb230 (100)210 (100)------------
 Bone marrow or stem cell transplant0 (0)1 (0.5)10 (2)26 (2)------
 Hematologic malignancy2 (0.9)6 (3)118 (20)144 (13)------
 Solid organ malignancy12 (5)15 (7)212 (36)497 (45)------
 Congenital immunodeficiency0 (0)2 (1)4 (0.7)5 (0.5)------
 Immunosuppressive medications230 (100)210 (100)128 (22)179 (16)------
 IBD/rheumatologic condition14 (6)16 (8)163 (28)330 (30)------
 HIV infection0 (0)2 (1)54 (9)97 (9)------
 Prior splenectomy1 (0.4)0 (0)2 (0.3)9 (0.8)------

Abbreviations: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; IQR, interquartile range; mRNA, messenger ribonucleic acid.

Hypoxemia at hospital admission was defined as an SpO2 <92% or use of supplemental oxygen within 24 hours of hospital admission. This information was collected for COVID-19 case patients and test-negative controls but not syndrome-negative controls.

Additional details about solid organ transplantation, including organ(s) transplanted, are in Table 2.

Participant Characteristics Abbreviations: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; IQR, interquartile range; mRNA, messenger ribonucleic acid. Hypoxemia at hospital admission was defined as an SpO2 <92% or use of supplemental oxygen within 24 hours of hospital admission. This information was collected for COVID-19 case patients and test-negative controls but not syndrome-negative controls. Additional details about solid organ transplantation, including organ(s) transplanted, are in Table 2.
Table 2.

Additional Information on Transplant History and Immunosuppressive Drugs in Solid Organ Transplant Recipients (Immune Status Group 1) (See Separate Upload per Format per Guidelines)

CharacteristicOverall (N = 440)Case (N = 230)Control (N = 210) P Value
Organ Transplanted, No. (%)
 Kidney214 (49)119 (52)95 (45).17
 Liver48 (11)24 (10)24 (11).74
 Heart45 (10)22 (10)23 (11).63
 Pancreas2 (0.5)2 (0.9)0 (0).18
 Intestine0 (0)0 (0)0 (0)---
 Lung93 (21)43 (19)50 (24).19
 Multiple organs38 (9)20 (9)18 (9).96
On immunosuppressive medications at time of admission, No./Total (%)440 (100)230 (100)210 (100)---
Years since most recent transplant, median (IQR)4.4 (1.6–9.5)4.1 (1.7–8.4)4.8 (1.6–10.6).42
History of rejection in previous year, No./Total (%)76/439 (17)33/229 (14)43/210 (20).09

Abbreviations: IQR, interquartile range.

Flow diagram of patient participation. Among 440 SOT recipients (Group 1), 214 had a kidney transplant, 93 had a lung transplant, 48 had a liver transplant, 45 had a heart transplant, 2 had a pancreas transplant, and 38 had multiple organs transplanted (Table 2). The median time between organ transplantation and hospital admission resulting in enrollment was 4.4 years (interquartile range [IQR], 1.6–9.5 years; 5 missing date); 48 (11%) of 435 SOT patients with known date of transplant were admitted within 6 months after the date of transplant. Among 439 SOT recipients (1 missing), 76 (17%) patients had evidence of organ rejection in the prior year; all included SOT patients were taking immunosuppressive medications at the time of admission. Among the 440 SOT recipients, 230 (52%) patients were COVID-19 cases and 210 (48%) patients were controls (Table 1). Two vaccine doses had been received by 140 of 230 (61%) SOT cases and 118 of 210 (56%) SOT controls. Three doses had been received by 24 of 230 (10%) SOT cases and 42 of 210 (20%) SOT controls. Additional Information on Transplant History and Immunosuppressive Drugs in Solid Organ Transplant Recipients (Immune Status Group 1) (See Separate Upload per Format per Guidelines) Abbreviations: IQR, interquartile range. Among 1684 patients with other immunocompromising conditions (Group 2), the most common conditions included active solid organ cancer (n = 709, 42%), IBD or rheumatologic conditions (n = 493, 29%), and active hematologic malignancy (n = 262, 16%) (Table 1). Within Group 2, 2 mRNA vaccine doses had been received by 235 of 589 (40%) cases and 646 of 1095 (59%) controls. Three doses had been received by 19 of 589 (3%) cases and 110 of 1095 (10%) controls. Among 8301 immunocompetent patients (Group 3), 2 mRNA vaccine doses had been received by 744 of 4151 (14%) cases and 2455 of 4150 (57%) controls and 3 vaccine doses by 22 of 4151 (0.5%) cases and 141 of 4150 (3%) controls.

Vaccine Effectiveness Against Coronavirus Disease 2019 Hospitalization

Among SOT recipients (Group 1), VE against COVID-19 hospitalization for 2 mRNA vaccine doses was 29% (95% confidence interval [CI], –19% to 58%), and for 3 mRNA vaccine doses it was 77% (95% CI, 48% to 90%), with a significant difference in VE between 2 doses and 3 doses (P = .002) (Figure 2). Among patients with other immunocompromising conditions (Group 2), VE against COVID-19 hospitalization for 2 mRNA vaccine doses was 72% (95% CI, 64% to 79%) and, for 3 doses it was 92% (95% CI, 85% to 95%) (P < .001 for 2 doses vs 3 doses). Among subgroups within Group 2, VE for 2 mRNA vaccine doses was 75% (95% CI, 62% to 84%) and for 3 vaccine doses it was 91% (95% CI, 78% to 97%) for those with active solid organ cancer (P = .02 for 2 doses vs 3 doses); VE for 2 vaccine doses was 74% (95% CI, 57% to 85%) and for 3 vaccine doses it was 97% (95% CI, 83% to 99%) for those with rheumatologic conditions or IBD (P = .012 for 2 doses vs 3 doses); and VE for 2 doses was 61% (95% CI, 14% to 83%) and for 3 doses it was 94% (95% CI, 72% to 98%) for those with active hematologic malignancies (P = .013 for 2 doses vs 3 doses). Among patients without immunocompromising conditions, VE for 2 vaccine doses was 88% (95% CI, 87% to 90%) and for 3 doses it was 96% (95% CI, 83% to 99%) (P < .001 for 2 doses vs 3 doses). Vaccine effectiveness results were similar after restricting COVID-19 cases to those with evidence of hypoxemia within 24 hours of hospital admission (Figure 2). Findings were also consistent in a post hoc analysis restricted to patients admitted after third-dose authorization.
Figure 2.

Vaccine effectiveness of mRNA vaccination against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) hospitalization by immune status group. Separate estimates were calculated for 2 doses of an mRNA vaccine and 3 doses of an mRNA vaccine. *Models were adjusted for calendar time of admission (in biweekly intervals), US Health and Human Services region, age group (18–49, 50–64, or ≥65 years), sex, and race and Hispanic ethnicity. †Post hoc P value comparisons of vaccine effectiveness for 2 doses vs 3 doses of an mRNA vaccine were obtained using the pwcompare function in Stata §Defined as receiving supplemental oxygen support or having a documented oxygen saturation <92% within 24 hours of admission. This analysis was restricted to cases who met criteria for hypoxemia within 24 hours of admission and all control patients (ie, including those with or without hypoxemia).

Vaccine effectiveness of mRNA vaccination against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) hospitalization by immune status group. Separate estimates were calculated for 2 doses of an mRNA vaccine and 3 doses of an mRNA vaccine. *Models were adjusted for calendar time of admission (in biweekly intervals), US Health and Human Services region, age group (18–49, 50–64, or ≥65 years), sex, and race and Hispanic ethnicity. †Post hoc P value comparisons of vaccine effectiveness for 2 doses vs 3 doses of an mRNA vaccine were obtained using the pwcompare function in Stata §Defined as receiving supplemental oxygen support or having a documented oxygen saturation <92% within 24 hours of admission. This analysis was restricted to cases who met criteria for hypoxemia within 24 hours of admission and all control patients (ie, including those with or without hypoxemia).

In-Hospital Clinical Outcomes of Coronavirus Disease 2019 Cases

Among 227 SOT recipients hospitalized with COVID-19 with outcome data (3 missing), 38 (17%) patients died in the hospital before day 28, including 30 of 163 (18%) who were vaccinated (with 2 or 3 doses) and 8 of 64 (13%) who were unvaccinated (P = .28). Among vaccinated cases, the severity of illness was generally greater for the SOT recipients and those with other immunocompromising conditions compared with immunocompetent patients, including for ICU admission (45% vs 32% vs 27%), invasive mechanical ventilation (21% vs 15% vs 13%), and in-hospital death within 28 days (18% vs 15% vs 10%) (Table 3). Among immunocompetent patients hospitalized with COVID-19, severe in-hospital outcomes were more common in unvaccinated patients compared with vaccinated patients. However, among patients with immunocompromising conditions hospitalized with COVID-19, the proportion of patients who experienced severe outcomes was similar for those unvaccinated and vaccinated (Table 3).
Table 3.

In-Hospital Clinical Outcomes Among COVID-19 Cases by Vaccination Status Within Each of the 3 Immune Status Groups (See Separate Upload per Format per Guidelines)

Outcome, No./ Total No. (%)aGroup 1: Solid Organ Transplant RecipientsGroup 2: Other Immunocompromising ConditionGroup 3: Immunocompetent
Vaccinated With 2 or 3 Doses (n = 163)Unvaccinated (n = 64) P ValuebVaccinated With 2 or 3 Doses (n = 253)Unvaccinated (n = 333) P ValueVaccinated With 2 or 3 doses (n = 757)Unvaccinated (n = 3362) P Value
In-hospital death (within 28 days)30 (18)8 (13).2837 (15)44 (13).6279 (10)349 (10).96
Invasive mechanical ventilation35 (21)11 (17).4738 (15)58 (17).4498 (13)847 (25)<.001
Noninvasive ventilation30 (18)8 (13).2847 (19)58 (17).72101 (13)583 (17).008
Vasopressor use36 (22)12 (19).5841 (16)63 (19).3993 (12)790 (23)<.001
New renal replacement therapy14 (9)6 (9).859 (4)17 (5).3739 (5)194 (6).51
ICU admission74 (45)19 (30).0381 (32)119 (36).35203 (27)1441 (43)<.001
Hospital length of stay, median (IQR)6 (4–11)6 (4–8).605.5 (3–10)6 (3–11).295 (3–9)6 (3–10)<.001

Abbreviations: ICU, intensive care unit; IQR, interquartile range.

Results provided for COVID-19 case patients who had information available on clinical outcomes (outcomes were not available for 38 of 4970 [0.8%] COVID-19 case patients); outcomes were censored at 28 days from the date of hospital admission.

P value comparisons between vaccinated and unvaccinated cases were calculated using the Pearson’s χ2 test for categorical variables and Wilcoxon rank-sum test for continuous variables.

In-Hospital Clinical Outcomes Among COVID-19 Cases by Vaccination Status Within Each of the 3 Immune Status Groups (See Separate Upload per Format per Guidelines) Abbreviations: ICU, intensive care unit; IQR, interquartile range. Results provided for COVID-19 case patients who had information available on clinical outcomes (outcomes were not available for 38 of 4970 [0.8%] COVID-19 case patients); outcomes were censored at 28 days from the date of hospital admission. P value comparisons between vaccinated and unvaccinated cases were calculated using the Pearson’s χ2 test for categorical variables and Wilcoxon rank-sum test for continuous variables.

DISCUSSION

In this multicenter, observational study of adults hospitalized in the United States between March and December 2021, VE for mRNA COVID-19 vaccines against COVID-19-associated hospitalization was significantly lower for SOT recipients than for immunocompetent people and for those with other immunocompromising conditions. These results highlight that people with moderate-to-severe immunosuppression are not a homogeneous group with regards to vaccine responses, and those with the greatest immunosuppression seem to have lower vaccine effectiveness than those with less severe immunosuppression. More importantly, VE against COVID-19 hospitalization for SOT recipients was substantially higher after 3 mRNA vaccine doses (77%) than after 2 doses (29%), demonstrating the importance of additional vaccine doses for this population. However, once hospitalized for COVID-19, vaccinated and unvaccinated SOT recipients had similar clinical outcomes, suggesting that vaccine-associated attenuation of disease severity previously observed in the immunocompetent population [16] may be less pronounced or even absent in the SOT population. These results highlight that SOT recipients remain at risk for severe COVID-19 despite vaccination and support the need for continued efforts to mitigate the risk of COVID-19 in this population. Fourth doses of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines are now recommended for people with moderate-to-severe immunocompromising conditions, including solid organ transplantation. Future analyses will be important to understand the effectiveness of fourth doses, the residual risk of severe COVID-19 among SOT recipients after 4 vaccine doses, and the durability of protection. In addition, these results highlight that other measures to reduce the risk of COVID-19 among SOT recipients should be considered, including vaccination of close contacts [19], individual immune monitoring [20], and infection prevention strategies such as face masking in public spaces and physical distancing. Several studies have indicated that COVID-19 mRNA vaccination results in reduced immune response among SOT recipients on immunosuppressive medication regimens compared with immunocompetent patients [11, 21–27]. Results of the current study suggest that reduced immunogenicity observed in the SOT population does translate into lower protection against severe COVID-19. However, there is hope vaccination can provide important protection against severe COVID-19 for SOT recipients because mRNA vaccine doses elicit cellular and humoral responses in many SOT recipients, including kidney [28], heart, and liver transplant recipients [29]. Increased VE against COVID-19 hospitalization with a third mRNA vaccine dose among SOT recipients in this study is encouraging. Impaired immune responses in immunosuppressed patients can often be overcome to provide benefit from vaccination through strategies such as additional priming doses, boosters, and modifying vaccines (eg, addition of adjuvants; increasing antigens) [30, 31]. However, immunosuppressive states are a heterogeneous range of conditions and treatments. Thus, the effects of vaccines likely vary by the severity and type of immunosuppression, and greater understanding of vaccine responses in the face of specific immunocompromising conditions is needed. For example, as shown in this study, SOT recipients appear to garner less protection from COVID-19 mRNA vaccine doses than people with some other immunocompromising conditions. From a vaccination policy perspective, immunosuppression has generally been considered binary—immunosuppressed or not. As our understanding of vaccination in immunosuppressed hosts improves, a better approach may be to consider the mechanistic effect that a specific condition has on the immune system and clinical effectiveness data for mechanistically rational subgroups of immunocompromising conditions [30]. Prior studies evaluating vaccine performance in immunocompromised hosts have generally taken 2 approaches. One approach has been to focus on evaluating immunogenicity (without clinical outcomes) in specific immunocompromising conditions [32, 33]. These studies are valuable initial steps but must be paired with clinical effectiveness data. The second approach has been to utilize electronic health records to identify enough patients with electronic codes for immunocompromising conditions to complete vaccine effectiveness analyses [7, 34]. These analyses are limited by lack of specificity for immunocompromising conditions and potential misclassification, because immunocompromising states are often transient and difficult pinpoint with electronic codes alone. The current study identified patients with a prior SOT and currently taking antirejection immunosuppressive medications as one specific subgroup of immunosuppression. We did this by leveraging the strengths of trained clinician investigators and a large hospital-based active surveillance program. Trained personnel collected accurate information on immunocompromising conditions, including the timing of immunosuppression in relation to vaccine receipt and onset of illness. We then applied modified immunosuppression algorithms developed by previous investigators to classify patients into groups relevant for VE evaluation [35, 36]. We then assessed for effect modification of VE across these groups and observed that lower VE in the large group traditionally labeled as “moderately-to-severely immunocompromised” was a weighted average of VE from many separate smaller groups, and VE for SOT recipients was substantially lower than for patients with many other immunocompromising conditions. This study has limitations to consider. First, although this was a multicenter study that enrolled over 10 000 participants, the number of SOT recipients hospitalized with COVID-19 was modest (n = 230), which prevented robust analyses evaluating factors that may be contributing determinants of VE for SOT patients, such as immunosuppressive medication regimen and time from organ transplant to vaccination. Second, the group of patients in this study classified as having other immunocompromising conditions (Group 2) included a heterogeneous array of medical conditions associated with varying degrees of immunosuppression; this group, along with the immunocompetent group, provided a comparator for interpretation of the VE estimates for SOT recipients. Third, this study included only hospitalized patients; thus, we are unable to provide data on VE against less severe COVID-19, such as symptomatic disease not resulting in hospitalization. Fourth, although potential confounders were included in multivariable models, residual confounding is possible in this observational study.

CONCLUSIONS

In conclusion, vaccine effectiveness of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines to prevent COVID-19-associated hospitalization was lower for SOT recipients than immunocompetent people. Three doses of an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine provided substantially greater protection than 2 doses for SOT recipients. Despite vaccination, SOT recipients remain at risk for severe COVID-19 and should take additional precautions to mitigate the risk of SARS-CoV-2 exposure.

Supplementary Data

Supplementary materials are available at The Journal of Infectious Diseases online. Supplementary materials consist of data provided by the author that are published to benefit the reader. The posted materials are not copyedited. The contents of all supplementary data are the sole responsibility of the authors. Questions or messages regarding errors should be addressed to the author. Click here for additional data file.
  7 in total

1.  Impact of COVID-19 on the liver and on the care of patients with chronic liver disease, hepatobiliary cancer, and liver transplantation: An updated EASL position paper.

Authors:  Thomas Marjot; Christiane S Eberhardt; Tobias Boettler; Luca S Belli; Marina Berenguer; Maria Buti; Rajiv Jalan; Mario U Mondelli; Richard Moreau; Daniel Shouval; Thomas Berg; Markus Cornberg
Journal:  J Hepatol       Date:  2022-07-20       Impact factor: 30.083

2.  Homotypic and heterotypic immune responses to Omicron variant in immunocompromised patients in diverse clinical settings.

Authors:  Victor H Ferreira; Javier T Solera; Queenie Hu; Victoria G Hall; Berta G Arbol; W Rod Hardy; Reuben Samson; Tina Marinelli; Matthew Ierullo; Avneet Kaur Virk; Alexandra Kurtesi; Faranak Mavandadnejad; Beata Majchrzak-Kita; Vathany Kulasingam; Anne-Claude Gingras; Deepali Kumar; Atul Humar
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-08-04       Impact factor: 17.694

3.  Immune responses following 3rd and 4th doses of heterologous and homologous COVID-19 vaccines in kidney transplant recipients.

Authors:  Tina Thomson; Maria Prendecki; Sarah Gleeson; Paul Martin; Katrina Spensley; Rute Cardoso De Aguiar; Bynvant Sandhu; Charlotte Seneschall; Jaslyn Gan; Candice L Clarke; Shanice Lewis; Graham Pickard; David Thomas; Stephen P McAdoo; Liz Lightstone; Alison Cox; Peter Kelleher; Michelle Willicombe
Journal:  EClinicalMedicine       Date:  2022-09-09

4.  Sequencing during Times of Change: Evaluating SARS-CoV-2 Clinical Samples during the Transition from the Delta to Omicron Wave.

Authors:  Shuchen Feng; Mudassir S Ali; Monika Evdokimova; Gail E Reid; Nina M Clark; Susan L Uprichard; Susan C Baker
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2022-06-28       Impact factor: 5.818

5.  Analysis of the Specific Immune Response after the Third Dose of mRNA COVID-19 Vaccines in Organ Transplant Recipients: Possible Spike-S1 Reactive IgA Signature in Protection from SARS-CoV-2 Infection.

Authors:  Monica Miele; Rosalia Busà; Giovanna Russelli; Maria Concetta Sorrentino; Mariangela Di Bella; Francesca Timoneri; Giampiero Vitale; Elisa Calzolari; Patrizio Vitulo; Alessandra Mularoni; Pier Giulio Conaldi; Matteo Bulati
Journal:  Microorganisms       Date:  2022-08-03

6.  Response to Correspondence on Outcomes of COVID-19 in Unvaccinated Compared With Vaccinated Solid Organ Transplant Recipients.

Authors:  Victoria G Hall; Atul Humar; Deepali Kumar
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  2022-07-25       Impact factor: 5.385

7.  Waning of vaccine effectiveness against moderate and severe covid-19 among adults in the US from the VISION network: test negative, case-control study.

Authors:  Jill M Ferdinands; Suchitra Rao; Brian E Dixon; Patrick K Mitchell; Malini B DeSilva; Stephanie A Irving; Ned Lewis; Karthik Natarajan; Edward Stenehjem; Shaun J Grannis; Jungmi Han; Charlene McEvoy; Toan C Ong; Allison L Naleway; Sarah E Reese; Peter J Embi; Kristin Dascomb; Nicola P Klein; Eric P Griggs; I-Chia Liao; Duck-Hye Yang; William F Fadel; Nancy Grisel; Kristin Goddard; Palak Patel; Kempapura Murthy; Rebecca Birch; Nimish R Valvi; Julie Arndorfer; Ousseny Zerbo; Monica Dickerson; Chandni Raiyani; Jeremiah Williams; Catherine H Bozio; Lenee Blanton; Ruth Link-Gelles; Michelle A Barron; Manjusha Gaglani; Mark G Thompson; Bruce Fireman
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2022-10-03
  7 in total

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