| Literature DB >> 35832309 |
Douglas F Lake1, Alexa J Roeder1, Maria J Gonzalez-Moa2, Megan Koehler1, Erin Kaleta3, Paniz Jasbi4, John Vanderhoof1, Davis McKechnie1, Jack Forman1, Baylee A Edwards1, Alim Seit-Nebi2, Sergei Svarovsky2.
Abstract
Background: While evaluating COVID-19 vaccine responses using a rapid neutralizing antibody (NAb) test, we observed that 25% of mRNA vaccine recipients did not neutralize >50%. We termed this group "vaccine poor responders" (VPRs). The objective of this study was to determine if individuals who neutralized <50% would remain VPRs, or if a third dose would elicit high levels of NAbs.Entities:
Keywords: RNA vaccines; Viral infection
Year: 2022 PMID: 35832309 PMCID: PMC9273613 DOI: 10.1038/s43856-022-00151-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Commun Med (Lond) ISSN: 2730-664X
Fig. 1Lateral flow assay to detect SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibody.
Interpretation of the rapid test is counter intuitive. A Methodology overview. Fingerstick blood is transferred to the sample port and followed by two drops chase buffer. Ten minutes later results can be interpreted. Absent or faint test line indicates high NAb levels, while dark or intense test line indicates low/no NAbs. B Mechanistic schematic. NAbs bind RBD coupled to a green gold nanoshell (GNS) and prevent the RBD/ACE2 interaction from occurring. Abs that bind RBD but do not neutralize allow the RBD/ACE2 interaction to occur, shown as increasingly dark signal as more RBD-GNS/ACE2 binds at the test line. C Example tests showing highly neutralizing (top), moderately neutralizing (middle), and poorly neutralizing antibodies (bottom) using either finger-stick whole blood. A monoclonal control antibody coupled to a red-GNS runs laterally with the sample/buffer mixture and binds at the control line, seen as a red line. Cartoon image was created by authors using BioRender.com. The picture of three lateral flow cassettes in Fig. 1C is an image from actual test subject samples.
Comparison of LFA density units to IC50, NAb titer, and percent neutralization.
| Image of NAb test result | Test line density unit ranges (thousands) | IC50 ranges | Reciprocal NAb titer ranges | % Neutralization ranges |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10–99 | 17,530 to 880.54 | <1280, ≥640 | 99–90 | |
| 100–199 | 880.53 to 357.847 | <640, ≥320 | 89–80 | |
| 200–369 | 357.845 to 160.927 | <320, ≥160 | 79–61 | |
| 370–599 | 160.927 to 85.88 | <160, ≥80 | 60–36 | |
| 600–799 | 85.88 to 59.102 | <80, ≥40 | 35–15 | |
| 800–1000 | 59.101 to 44.23 | ≤40 | ≤15 |
Correlation of IC50 values from a Focus Reduction Neutralization Test (FRNT) using authentic SARS-CoV-2 with number of samples per IC50 group were re-worded to reflect titer ranges used in the table using five PCR-confirmed samples with IC50 values ≤40, five samples with IC50 values ≥40 and <80, eight samples with IC50 values ≥80 and <160, three samples with IC50 values ≥160 and <320, eleven samples with IC50 values ≥320 and <640, and six samples with IC50 values ≥640. Reciprocal NAb titers were derived using the highest dilution that did not exceed each serum IC50 value. Percent neutralization was calculated using the following formula: 1-(Test sample line density/Limit of Detection)*100% where LoD for non-neutralizing sera for the rapid test was 942,481. Limit of detection (LoD) was calculated based on the method of Armbruster and Pry[37], using a convalescent serum sample containing the lowest detectable concentration of analyte (neutralizing antibodies) still distinguishable from a blank. Due to the competitive format of the LFA, the operand was changed to reflect subtraction from limit of blank (LoB) rather than addition: LoD= limit of blank (LoB) – (1.65* SDlow conc sample): LoD = 1,047,382- (1.65 * 63,769) = 942,481 Test Line Density Units. A lower LoD was not applicable, as polyclonal antisera was used in this study, rather than an individual Mab. Alternatively, the average line density observed for the top 10 donors who demonstrated the strongest ability to prevent RBD from binding to ACE2 was 20,706.
Demographic Information.
| Age / Sex | RT-PCR results | 1st and 2nd dose vaccine | 3rd dose vaccine | Months post-2nd dose, Prior to 3rd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 70-75 / M | Negative^ | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 1 |
| 30-35 / M | Negative* | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 7 |
| 60-65 / M | Negative* | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 8 |
| 50-55 / M | N/A | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 5 |
| 56-60 / F | Negative* | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 6 |
| 60-65 / M | Negative^ | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 7 |
| 50-55 / F | Negative* | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 7 |
| 60-65/ M | N/A | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 6 |
| 66-70 / F | Negative* | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 6 |
| 60-65 / F | Negative^ | BNT162b2 | mRNA-1273 | 1 |
| 56-60/ F | Negative* | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 7 |
| 70-75 / F | Negative~ | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 5 |
| 70-75 / F | N/A | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 6 |
| 76-80 / M | Negative* | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 7 |
| 70-75 / F | Negative* | BNT162b2 | mRNA-1273 | 6 |
| 76-80 / F | N/A | BNT162b2 | mRNA-1273 | 6 |
| 60-65 / F | Negative* | BNT162b2 | mRNA-1273 | 5 |
| 66-70 / M | Negative^ | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 6 |
| 40-45/ M | Negative^ | BNT162b2 | mRNA-1273 | 6 |
| 70-75 / M | Negative^ | mRNA-1273 | mRNA-1273 | 5 |
| 50-55 / F | N/A | BNT162b2 | mRNA-1273 | 3 |
| 70-75 / F | Negative* | BNT162b2 | BNT162b2 | 6 |
| 36-40 / F | Negative* | BNT162b2 | mRNA-1273 | 4 |
^ = TaqPath (Thermo Fisher)
* = Abbott Real Time SARS-CoV-2
~ = PerkinElmer SARS-CoV-2 Real-Time RT-PCR assay
NA = Not Available; participants denied having COVID-19 or being exposed.
Demographic information for 23 study participants who received a 3rd RNA Vaccine Dose. Twenty-two individuals received two doses of BNT162b2 and one individual received two mRNA-1273 doses initially. 15 of the 22 individuals that were originally vaccinated with BNT162b2 obtained a 3rd dose of BNT162b2, and 8 received mRNA-1273 (100 µg) as their 3rd dose. One individual originally vaccinated with mRNA-1273 received a 3rd, 100 µg dose of mRNA-1273. All participants had either confirmed negative RT-PCR results or no known history of infection prior to enrollment. RT-PCR platform indicated using symbols defined below Table S1. Age ranges are provided to protect the identities of the individuals in the study.
Fig. 2NAb profile of mRNA vaccine recipients pre- and post-3rd vaccine dose.
A Spectrum of NAb levels 2–4 weeks post-2nd mRNA vaccine dose (180 BNT162b2 combined with 89 mRNA-1273 vaccine recipients = 269) ranging from 0% neutralization to 99% neutralization. Horizontal line within second and third quartile box denotes median at 83%. Sixty-nine participants in the lower quartile neutralized at <50%. Red dots in lower quartile indicate participants who received 3rd vaccine doses as shown in (B). B Vaccine Poor Responder Third Dose Recipients Red lines indicate NAb levels in poor responders (<50% neutralization) at 2–4 weeks post second dose, 1–2 weeks prior to a third vaccine dose and 2–4 weeks after a third dose of either BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273. Solid black line is the average % Neutralization of 3rd vaccine dose recipients at each time point with error bars that represent 95% confidence intervals. At 2–4 weeks post-3rd dose the average neutralization was 88%.
Fig. 3Comparison of NAbs after 2nd dose of either mRNA-1273 or BNT162b2.
% Neutralization (y-axis) indicates NAb levels ranging from 0 to 99% neutralization. Data shown as box and whisker plots with black vertical lines that denote upper and lower extremes, and horizontal lines that denote upper and lower quartiles with median at the midline. Median neutralization of mRNA-1273 (n = 89) and BNT162b2 (n = 180) is 92% and 71%, respectively. Mean neutralization for mRNA-1273 and BNT162b2 groups is 80% and 63%, respectively. Red dots indicate VPRs that received a 3rd vaccine dose as shown in Fig. 2B, demographics in Table 2.