Expert Review of Vaccines (Dec 2024)

Immunogenicity and safety of two-dose or three-dose regimens of inactivated COVID-19 vaccines in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis: a randomised clinical trial

  • Pengfei Jin,
  • Qiao Liu,
  • Wenli Chen,
  • Xilin Guo,
  • Hongmei Jiang,
  • Ruimei Zhang,
  • Mingdong Ding,
  • Kui Zhang,
  • Zhaolan Cao,
  • Jiexiao He,
  • Siyue Jia,
  • Mingwei Wei,
  • Yuansheng Hu,
  • Lunbiao Cui,
  • Jianfeng Wang,
  • Zhuopei Li,
  • Xiaoyin Zhang,
  • Xin Xia,
  • Yanfei Wu,
  • Li Zhou,
  • Yawen Zhu,
  • Chunjing Gao,
  • Tiantian Zhang,
  • Fengcai Zhu,
  • Gang Zeng,
  • Limei Zhu,
  • Jingxin Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/14760584.2024.2425283
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1041 – 1051

Abstract

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Background To assess the immunogenicity and safety of two-dose regimen of inactivated COVID-19 vaccines in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) and explored the potential benefits of additional dose.Research design and methods In total, 182 PTB patients were randomly (1:1) assigned to the standard-dose group to receive three standard doses of inactivated COVID-19 vaccines, or the double-dose boosting group to receive two standard doses plus a double dose, with a 28-day interval. Forty healthy controls were assigned to receive two doses of inactivated COVID-19 vaccines 28 days apart. The primary endpoint was neutralizing antibodies 28 days after the second vaccination.Results Two doses of inactivated COVID-19 vaccines induced comparable neutralizing antibodies in PTB patients and the healthy controls, with GMTs against ancestral SARS-CoV-2 of 36.8 vs 31.4 (p = 0.4618) and seroconversion rates of 83.9% vs 87.5% (p = 0.6965). In the PTB patients, a third dose at day 56 led to a modest increase in neutralizing antibodies compared to the second dose, with a GMT fold increase of 1.3–1.8. Most adverse reactions were mild pain at the injection site.Conclusions Inactivated COVID-19 vaccine was safe and immunogenic in PTB patients, and two-dose immunization could induce moderate level of humoral responses similar to the healthy adults.Clinical trials registration www.clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT05148949.

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