PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Anti-spike antibody response to the COVID vaccine in lymphoma patients.

  • Alexandra Della Pia,
  • Gee Youn Geeny Kim,
  • Andrew Ip,
  • Jaeil Ahn,
  • Yanzhi Liu,
  • Simone Kats,
  • Michael Koropsak,
  • Brittany Lukasik,
  • Anamta Contractor,
  • Krushna Amin,
  • Lakshmi Ayyagari,
  • Charles Zhao,
  • Amolika Gupta,
  • Mark Batistick,
  • Lori A Leslie,
  • Andre H Goy,
  • Tatyana A Feldman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0266584
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 12
p. e0266584

Abstract

Read online

Patients with hematologic malignancies have poor outcomes from COVID infection and are less likely to mount an antibody response after COVID infection. This is a retrospective study of adult lymphoma patients who received the COVID vaccine between 12/1/2020 and 11/30/2021. The primary endpoint was a positive anti-COVID spike protein antibody level following the primary COVID vaccination series. The primary vaccination series was defined as 2 doses of the COVID mRNA vaccines or 1 dose of the COVID adenovirus vaccine. Subgroups were compared using Fisher's exact test, and unadjusted and adjusted logistic regression models were used for univariate and multivariate analyses. A total of 243 patients were included in this study; 72 patients (30%) with indolent lymphomas; 56 patients (23%) with Burkitt's, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), and primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma (PMBL) combined; 55 patients (22%) with chronic lymphocytic leukemia or small lymphocytic lymphoma (CLL/SLL); 44 patients (18%) with Hodgkin and T-cell lymphomas (HL/TCL) combined; 12 patients (5%) with mantle cell lymphoma; and 4 patients (2%) with other lymphoma types. One-hundred fifty-eight patients (65%) developed anti-COVID spike protein antibodies after completing the primary COVID vaccination series. Thirty-eight of 46 (83%) patients who received an additional primary shot and had resultant levels produced anti-COVID spike protein antibodies. When compared to other lymphoma types, patients with CLL/SLL had a numerically lower seroconversion rate of 51% following the primary vaccination series whereas patients with HL/TCL appeared to have a robust antibody response with a seropositivity rate of 77% (p = 0.04). Lymphoma patients are capable of mounting a humoral response to the COVID vaccines. Further studies are required to confirm our findings, including whether T-cell immunity would be of clinical relevance in this patient population.