Literature DB >> 35925645

CLL and COVID-19: light at the end of the tunnel?

Lydia Scarfò1, Yair Herishanu2.   

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Year:  2022        PMID: 35925645      PMCID: PMC9352187          DOI: 10.1182/blood.2022017071

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood        ISSN: 0006-4971            Impact factor:   25.476


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In this issue of Blood, Niemann et al investigate the outcomes of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), which is caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The outcomes cover a span of almost 2 years. The authors focused on the surges of different SARS-CoV-2 variants, and they found a much milder course for COVID-19 during the time that the omicron variant was dominant, with a 30-day mortality rate as low as 1% in younger patients not tested at hospital sites. On the basis of the data collected in the Danish registry, the authors analyzed the outcomes of populations tested at hospital sites (patient data were thereby included in the electronic health records [EHRs] system) during 4 different time periods between March 2020 and the end of January 2022. They found a significant improvement in the period from November 2021 to January 2022, when omicron and its subvariant BA.2 first emerged and then became dominant. The 30-day hospital admission rates declined from 83% to 55%, intensive care unit (ICU) admission rates declined from 13% to 0%, and 30-day overall survival improved from 83% to 91% (during the period when the omicron variant dominated), but decreased again to 77% with the occurrence of the BA.2 subvariant. Even more importantly, when the analysis was extended to include 640 patients in the CLL registry who tested positive (by polymerase chain reaction assay) for SARS-CoV-2 outside the EHRs system, the 30-day overall survival increased from 88% to 98% over the observation period. With more than 510 000 000 infections and more than 6 200 000 cumulative deaths worldwide (https://covid19.who.int/ as of 15 May 2022), COVID-19 has had a dramatic impact on populations all over the world. Patients with hematologic malignancies are more profoundly affected because they have a 34% mortality rate when hospitalized as a result of COVID-19. Among those with hematologic malignancies, patients with CLL were at higher risk because of CLL-associated immune dysfunction. Patients with CLL who required active treatment had a worse outcome, even in the era of targeted agents. Large retrospective series during the first wave of COVID-19 documented a case fatality rate as high as 33%, with an improvement to 20% during the second wave in 1 international retrospective cohort of hospitalized patients with CLL. However, this more favorable outcome was not confirmed in a large European cohort of 941 patients with CLL and COVID-19 (see Figure ); in that case, the fatality rate of hospitalized patients actually increased slightly to 38.4%.

COVID-19–related mortality in patients with CLL over time. The COVID-19–related mortality in patients with CLL during different waves of COVID-19 (initial studies on the left) is depicted. Initial studies (up to 35%, on the left) reported the highest mortality rate for COVID-19, whereas more recent retrospective series documented a much lower mortality rate (1%-23%, depending on the setting of data collection).

COVID-19–related mortality in patients with CLL over time. The COVID-19–related mortality in patients with CLL during different waves of COVID-19 (initial studies on the left) is depicted. Initial studies (up to 35%, on the left) reported the highest mortality rate for COVID-19, whereas more recent retrospective series documented a much lower mortality rate (1%-23%, depending on the setting of data collection). Since December 2020, the availability of vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 raised hopes of preventing severe disease. As expected, vaccine response is impaired in patients with CLL. Only 40% of patients developed detectable antibodies after 2 vaccine doses (ranging from 80% in those in clinical remission to 0% in those receiving active anti-CD20 therapy) with generally lower titers in those who do respond. The jury is still out regarding the dynamics of the T-cell response after vaccination. The results are contradictory regarding the generation and reactivity of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells against SARS-CoV-2 in patients with hematologic malignancies. This is expected, considering that the evaluation of T-cell function is complex and that it is more difficult to reliably assess cellular responses. Despite the need for further studies to better address the immune response, primary vaccination and booster doses are recommended for all patients with CLL regardless of serological results. In addition to vaccines, several treatment modalities, including monoclonal antibodies (eg, sotrovimab, etesevimab-bamlanivimab, imdevimab-casirivimab) and antiviral treatments (initially remdesivir, then nirmatrelvir-ritonavir and molnupiravir) have been approved to prevent infections from progressing from mild-moderate to severe. These treatments have been administered to immunocompromised patients and are associated with improved outcomes. However, most of the monoclonal antibody products rapidly fell from grace because they were largely ineffective for the novel variants of concern that keep emerging. Recently, the combination of 2 long-acting antibodies, tixagevimab and cilgavimab, has been authorized as pre-exposure prophylaxis for COVID-19 in patients who are moderately to severely immunocompromised. The initial authorized dose of tixagevimab/cilgavimab was increased to 300 mg/300 mg because higher doses increase the chance of preventing infection by the omicron subvariants. In this challenging scenario, the study by Niemann et al suggests that the odds that patients with CLL can control their SARS-CoV-2 infection and avoid severe manifestations (including death) are improving. Recent work has suggested that, in the general population, the risk of severe outcomes after SARS-CoV-2 infection is substantially lower for those infected with the omicron variant, including for more severe end points. The analysis by Niemann et al concentrates on immunocompromised patients and confirms that this reduction in the risk of severe outcomes also holds true for younger patients with CLL who are not included in the EHR system. When focusing on the cohort with data extracted from the EHRs system, even though hospitalization and ICU admission rates declined, the mortality rate maintained high at 23% during the period when omicron sublineage BA.2 dominated. Because the EHR population was characterized by an older median age and the need for hospital access, this category of patients is more fragile. They would benefit from timely screening, prompt intervention, and close follow-up to avoid a dismal outcome. These findings are in keeping with the recent report from the Israeli group of a 31% case fatality rate in hospitalized patients with CLL during the time of omicron dominance (January to March 2022). The study by Niemann et al has some limitations. The data we analyzed were extracted from EHRs and/or a registry in which information on SARS-CoV-2 antibody levels, number of vaccine doses received, and specifics of COVID-19 prophylaxis were missing. No information on hospitalization rate or ICU admission was available for the population cohort. Nevertheless, the findings of this study, if validated in different settings, would suggest that we are indeed making progress in managing patients with CLL and COVID-19. Although it is not clear how much each of the pieces (vaccines, other prophylactic and mitigation measures, treatment, and the properties of viral strains) contributed to the improvement, the trend is favorable. Hopefully, we can continue to drastically reduce the mortality rate in this vulnerable patient population by maximally exploiting each component of the antiviral strategies and improving them. It is also critically important to make each of these components available to all patients with CLL worldwide. Progress has been made, but more needs to be done to remove the COVID-19 shackles from patients with CLL.
  10 in total

1.  COVID-19 in patients with hematologic malignancy.

Authors:  Petra Langerbeins; Michael Hallek
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2022-07-21       Impact factor: 25.476

2.  Patients with CLL have a lower risk of death from COVID-19 in the Omicron era.

Authors:  Carsten U Niemann; Caspar da Cunha-Bang; Marie Helleberg; Sisse R Ostrowski; Christian Brieghel
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2022-08-04       Impact factor: 25.476

3.  COVID-19 severity and mortality in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia: a joint study by ERIC, the European Research Initiative on CLL, and CLL Campus.

Authors:  Lydia Scarfò; Thomas Chatzikonstantinou; Gian Matteo Rigolin; Giulia Quaresmini; Marina Motta; Candida Vitale; Jose Antonio Garcia-Marco; José Ángel Hernández-Rivas; Fatima Mirás; Mónica Baile; Juan Marquet; Carsten U Niemann; Gianluigi Reda; Talha Munir; Eva Gimeno; Monia Marchetti; Francesca Maria Quaglia; Marzia Varettoni; Julio Delgado; Sunil Iyengar; Ann Janssens; Roberto Marasca; Angela Ferrari; Carolina Cuéllar-García; Gilad Itchaki; Martin Špaček; Lorenzo De Paoli; Luca Laurenti; Mark-David Levin; Enrico Lista; Francesca R Mauro; Martin Šimkovič; Ellen Van Der Spek; Elisabeth Vandenberghe; Livio Trentin; Ewa Wasik-Szczepanek; Rosa Ruchlemer; Dominique Bron; Maria Rosaria De Paolis; Giovanni Del Poeta; Lucia Farina; Myriam Foglietta; Massimo Gentile; Yair Herishanu; Tobias Herold; Ozren Jaksic; Arnon P Kater; Sabina Kersting; Lara Malerba; Lorella Orsucci; Viola Maria Popov; Paolo Sportoletti; Mohamed Yassin; Barbara Pocali; Gabor Barna; Annalisa Chiarenza; Gimena Dos Santos; Eugene Nikitin; Martin Andres; Maria Dimou; Michael Doubek; Alicia Enrico; Yervand Hakobyan; Olga Kalashnikova; Macarena Ortiz Pareja; Maria Papaioannou; Davide Rossi; Nimish Shah; Amit Shrestha; Oana Stanca; Niki Stavroyianni; Vladimir Strugov; Constantine Tam; Mihnea Zdrenghea; Marta Coscia; Kostas Stamatopoulos; Giuseppe Rossi; Alessandro Rambaldi; Emili' Montserrat; Robin Foà; Antonio Cuneo; Paolo Ghia
Journal:  Leukemia       Date:  2020-07-09       Impact factor: 11.528

4.  Efficacy of the BNT162b2 mRNA COVID-19 vaccine in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia.

Authors:  Yair Herishanu; Irit Avivi; Anat Aharon; Gabi Shefer; Shai Levi; Yotam Bronstein; Miguel Morales; Tomer Ziv; Yamit Shorer Arbel; Lydia Scarfò; Erel Joffe; Chava Perry; Paolo Ghia
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2021-06-10       Impact factor: 22.113

5.  Comparative analysis of the risks of hospitalisation and death associated with SARS-CoV-2 omicron (B.1.1.529) and delta (B.1.617.2) variants in England: a cohort study.

Authors:  Tommy Nyberg; Neil M Ferguson; Sophie G Nash; Harriet H Webster; Seth Flaxman; Nick Andrews; Wes Hinsley; Jamie Lopez Bernal; Meaghan Kall; Samir Bhatt; Paula Blomquist; Asad Zaidi; Erik Volz; Nurin Abdul Aziz; Katie Harman; Sebastian Funk; Sam Abbott; Russell Hope; Andre Charlett; Meera Chand; Azra C Ghani; Shaun R Seaman; Gavin Dabrera; Daniela De Angelis; Anne M Presanis; Simon Thelwall
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2022-03-16       Impact factor: 202.731

6.  COVID-19 in patients with lymphoproliferative diseases during the Omicron variant surge.

Authors:  Yotam Bronstein; Roi Gat; Shai Levi; Yael C Cohen; Efrat Luttwak; Noam Benyamini; Tamir Shragai; Roy Vitkon; Miriam Neaman; Nili Eilaty; Mor Levi; Svetlana Trestman; Chava Perry; Yair Herishanu; Irit Avivi
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2022-04-21       Impact factor: 38.585

7.  Outcomes of COVID-19 in patients with CLL: a multicenter international experience.

Authors:  Anthony R Mato; Lindsey E Roeker; Nicole Lamanna; John N Allan; Lori Leslie; John M Pagel; Krish Patel; Anders Osterborg; Daniel Wojenski; Manali Kamdar; Scott F Huntington; Matthew S Davids; Jennifer R Brown; Darko Antic; Ryan Jacobs; Inhye E Ahn; Jeffrey Pu; Krista M Isaac; Paul M Barr; Chaitra S Ujjani; Mark B Geyer; Ellin Berman; Andrew D Zelenetz; Nikita Malakhov; Richard R Furman; Michael Koropsak; Neil Bailey; Lotta Hanson; Guilherme F Perini; Shuo Ma; Christine E Ryan; Adrian Wiestner; Craig A Portell; Mazyar Shadman; Elise A Chong; Danielle M Brander; Suchitra Sundaram; Amanda N Seddon; Erlene Seymour; Meera Patel; Nicolas Martinez-Calle; Talha Munir; Renata Walewska; Angus Broom; Harriet Walter; Dima El-Sharkawi; Helen Parry; Matthew R Wilson; Piers E M Patten; José-Ángel Hernández-Rivas; Fatima Miras; Noemi Fernández Escalada; Paola Ghione; Chadi Nabhan; Sonia Lebowitz; Erica Bhavsar; Javier López-Jiménez; Daniel Naya; Jose Antonio Garcia-Marco; Sigrid S Skånland; Raul Cordoba; Toby A Eyre
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2020-09-03       Impact factor: 25.476

8.  Outcomes of patients with hematologic malignancies and COVID-19: a systematic review and meta-analysis of 3377 patients.

Authors:  Abi Vijenthira; Inna Y Gong; Thomas A Fox; Stephen Booth; Gordon Cook; Bruno Fattizzo; Fernando Martín-Moro; Jerome Razanamahery; John C Riches; Jeff Zwicker; Rushad Patell; Marie Christiane Vekemans; Lydia Scarfò; Thomas Chatzikonstantinou; Halil Yildiz; Raphaël Lattenist; Ioannis Mantzaris; William A Wood; Lisa K Hicks
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2020-12-17       Impact factor: 22.113

9.  COVID-19 in patients with CLL: improved survival outcomes and update on management strategies.

Authors:  Lindsey E Roeker; Toby A Eyre; Meghan C Thompson; Nicole Lamanna; Alexander R Coltoff; Matthew S Davids; Peter O Baker; Lori Leslie; Kerry A Rogers; John N Allan; Raul Cordoba; Alberto Lopez-Garcia; Darko Antic; John M Pagel; Nicolas Martinez-Calle; José Antonio García-Marco; Jose-Ángel Hernández-Rivas; Fatima Miras; Catherine C Coombs; Anders Österborg; Lotta Hansson; Amanda N Seddon; Javier López Jiménez; Matthew R Wilson; Dima El-Sharkawi; Daniel Wojenski; Shuo Ma; Talha Munir; Susana Valenciano; Erlene Seymour; Paul M Barr; Jeffrey Pu; Piers E M Patten; Guilherme F Perini; Scott F Huntington; Helen Parry; Suchitra Sundaram; Alan Skarbnik; Manali Kamdar; Ryan Jacobs; Harriet Walter; Renata Walewska; Angus Broom; Sonia Lebowitz; Krista M Isaac; Craig A Portell; Inhye E Ahn; Chaitra S Ujjani; Mazyar Shadman; Sigrid S Skånland; Elise A Chong; Anthony R Mato
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2021-11-04       Impact factor: 22.113

10.  COVID-19 severity and mortality in patients with CLL: an update of the international ERIC and Campus CLL study.

Authors:  Thomas Chatzikonstantinou; Anargyros Kapetanakis; Lydia Scarfò; Paolo Ghia; Georgios Karakatsoulis; David Allsup; Alejandro Alonso Cabrero; Martin Andres; Darko Antic; Mónica Baile; Panagiotis Baliakas; Dominique Bron; Antonella Capasso; Sofia Chatzileontiadou; Raul Cordoba; Juan-Gonzalo Correa; Carolina Cuéllar-García; Lorenzo De Paoli; Maria Rosaria De Paolis; Giovanni Del Poeta; Christos Demosthenous; Maria Dimou; David Donaldson; Michael Doubek; Maria Efstathopoulou; Barbara Eichhorst; Shaimaa El-Ashwah; Alicia Enrico; Blanca Espinet; Lucia Farina; Angela Ferrari; Myriam Foglietta; Henrik Frederiksen; Moritz Fürstenau; José A García-Marco; Rocío García-Serra; Massimo Gentile; Eva Gimeno; Andreas Glenthøj; Maria Gomes da Silva; Odit Gutwein; Yervand K Hakobyan; Yair Herishanu; José Ángel Hernández-Rivas; Tobias Herold; Idanna Innocenti; Gilad Itchaki; Ozren Jaksic; Ann Janssens; Оlga B Kalashnikova; Elżbieta Kalicińska; Linda Katharina Karlsson; Arnon P Kater; Sabina Kersting; Jorge Labrador; Deepesh Lad; Luca Laurenti; Mark-David Levin; Enrico Lista; Alberto Lopez-Garcia; Lara Malerba; Roberto Marasca; Monia Marchetti; Juan Marquet; Mattias Mattsson; Francesca R Mauro; Ivana Milosevic; Fatima Mirás; Marta Morawska; Marina Motta; Talha Munir; Roberta Murru; Carsten U Niemann; Raquel Nunes Rodrigues; Jacopo Olivieri; Lorella Orsucci; Maria Papaioannou; Miguel Arturo Pavlovsky; Inga Piskunova; Viola Maria Popov; Francesca Maria Quaglia; Giulia Quaresmini; Kristian Qvist; Gianluigi Reda; Gian Matteo Rigolin; Rosa Ruchlemer; Gevorg Saghumyan; Amit Shrestha; Martin Šimkovič; Martin Špaček; Paolo Sportoletti; Oana Stanca; Niki Stavroyianni; Tamar Tadmor; Doreen Te Raa; Sanne H Tonino; Livio Trentin; Ellen Van Der Spek; Michel van Gelder; Roel van Kampen; Marzia Varettoni; Andrea Visentin; Candida Vitale; Ewa Wasik-Szczepanek; Tomasz Wróbel; Lucrecia Yáñez San Segundo; Mohamed Yassin; Marta Coscia; Alessandro Rambaldi; Emili Montserrat; Robin Foà; Antonio Cuneo; Kostas Stamatopoulos
Journal:  Leukemia       Date:  2021-11-01       Impact factor: 11.528

  10 in total

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