Frontiers in Immunology (Sep 2022)

Humoral response and neutralising capacity at 6 months post-vaccination against COVID-19 among institutionalised older adults in Argentina

  • Pamela E. Rodriguez,
  • Andrea P. Silva,
  • Esteban A. Miglietta,
  • Pablo Rall,
  • Carla A. Pascuale,
  • Christian Ballejo,
  • Lucía López Miranda,
  • Antonella S. Ríos,
  • Lila Ramis,
  • Jimena Marro,
  • Verónica Poncet,
  • Bianca Mazzitelli,
  • Melina Salvatori,
  • Ana Ceballos,
  • María M. Gonzalez Lopez Ledesma,
  • Diego S. Ojeda,
  • María F. Aguirre,
  • Yanina Miragaya,
  • Andrea V. Gamarnik,
  • Andrés H. Rossi,
  • Laboratorio SeVa Group,
  • PAMI Group,
  • Diana R. Rodriguez García,
  • Magalí G. Bialer,
  • María José de Leone,
  • Natalí B: Rasetto,
  • Shirley D. Wenker,
  • Luciana Bianchimano,
  • Maria Soledad Treffinger Cienfuegos,
  • C. Esteban Hernando,
  • Daniel A. Careno,
  • Corina Garcia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.992370
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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The COVID-19 pandemic has particularly affected older adults residing in nursing homes, resulting in high rates of hospitalisation and death. Here, we evaluated the longitudinal humoral response and neutralising capacity in plasma samples of volunteers vaccinated with different platforms (Sputnik V, BBIBP-CorV, and AZD1222). A cohort of 851 participants, mean age 83 (60-103 years), from the province of Buenos Aires, Argentina were included. Sequential plasma samples were taken at different time points after vaccination. After completing the vaccination schedule, infection-naïve volunteers who received either Sputnik V or AZD1222 exhibited significantly higher specific anti-Spike IgG titers than those who received BBIBP-CorV. Strong correlation between anti-Spike IgG titers and neutralising activity levels was evidenced at all times studied (rho=0.7 a 0.9). Previous exposure to SARS-CoV-2 and age <80 years were both associated with higher specific antibody levels. No differences in neutralising capacity were observed for the infection-naïve participants in either gender or age group. Similar to anti-Spike IgG titers, neutralising capacity decreased 3 to 9-fold at 6 months after initial vaccination for all platforms. Neutralising capacity against Omicron was between 10-58 fold lower compared to ancestral B.1 for all vaccine platforms at 21 days post dose 2 and 180 days post dose 1. This work provides evidence about the humoral response and neutralising capacity elicited by vaccination of a vulnerable elderly population. This data could be useful for pandemic management in defining public health policies, highlighting the need to apply reinforcements after a complete vaccination schedule.

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