Cancers (Sep 2023)

COVID-19 Infection despite Previous Vaccination in Cancer Patients and Healthcare Workers: Results from a French Prospective Multicenter Cohort (PAPESCO-19)

  • Valérie Seegers,
  • Guillaume Rousseau,
  • Ke Zhou,
  • Audrey Blanc-Lapierre,
  • Frédéric Bigot,
  • Hakim Mahammedi,
  • Aurélien Lambert,
  • Camille Moreau-Bachelard,
  • Mario Campone,
  • Thierry Conroy,
  • Frédérique Penault-Llorca,
  • Martine M. Bellanger,
  • Jean-Luc Raoul

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers15194777
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 19
p. 4777

Abstract

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In a multicenter prospective cohort of cancer patients (CP; n = 840) and healthcare workers (HCWs; n = 935) vaccinated against COVID-19, we noticed the following: i/after vaccination, 4.4% of HCWs and 5.8% of CP were infected; ii/no characteristic was associated with post-vaccine COVID-19 infections among HCWs; iii/CP who developed infections were younger, more frequently women (NS), more frequently had gastrointestinal, gynecological, or breast cancer and a localized cancer stage; iv/CP vaccinated while receiving chemotherapy or targeted therapy had (NS) more breakthrough infections after vaccination than those vaccinated after these treatments; the opposite was noted with radiotherapy, immunotherapy, or hormonotherapy; v/most COVID-19 infections occurred either during the Alpha wave (11/41 HCW, 20/49 CP), early after the first vaccination campaign started, or during the Omicron wave (21/41 HCW, 20/49 CP), more than 3 months after the second dose; vi/risk of infection was not associated with values of antibody titers; vii/the outcome of these COVID-19 infections after vaccination was not severe in all cases. To conclude, around 5% of our CPs or HCWs developed a COVID-19 infection despite previous vaccination. The outcome of these infections was not severe.

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