Breakthrough COVID-19 in Vaccinated Patients with Haematologic Malignancies—The First Single-Centre Experience from the Czech Republic
Martin Čerňan,
Tomáš Szotkowski,
Jiří Minařík,
Milan Kolář,
Pavel Sauer,
Vojtěch Látal,
Jana Zapletalová,
Tomáš Papajík
Affiliations
Martin Čerňan
Department of Haemato-Oncology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University and University Hospital Olomouc, I.P. Pavlova 6, 77 900 Olomouc, Czech Republic
Tomáš Szotkowski
Department of Haemato-Oncology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University and University Hospital Olomouc, I.P. Pavlova 6, 77 900 Olomouc, Czech Republic
Jiří Minařík
Department of Haemato-Oncology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University and University Hospital Olomouc, I.P. Pavlova 6, 77 900 Olomouc, Czech Republic
Milan Kolář
Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University and University Hospital Olomouc, Hněvotínská 3, 77 515 Olomouc, Czech Republic
Pavel Sauer
Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University and University Hospital Olomouc, Hněvotínská 3, 77 515 Olomouc, Czech Republic
Vojtěch Látal
Department of Haemato-Oncology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University and University Hospital Olomouc, I.P. Pavlova 6, 77 900 Olomouc, Czech Republic
Jana Zapletalová
Department of Medical Biophysics, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University Olomouc, Hněvotínská 3, 77 515 Olomouc, Czech Republic
Tomáš Papajík
Department of Haemato-Oncology, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University and University Hospital Olomouc, I.P. Pavlova 6, 77 900 Olomouc, Czech Republic
Vaccination is an important tool in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic in patients with haematologic malignancies. The paper provides an analysis of the course of breakthrough SARS-CoV-2 infection in a group of vaccinated patients with haematological malignancy and a comparison with a historical cohort of 96 non-vaccinated patients with haematologic malignancies and bone marrow failure syndromes (two patients) in the treatment of COVID-19. A severe or critical course of COVID-19 was significantly less frequent in the group of vaccinated patients (10.2% vs. 31.4%, p = 0.003). The need for hospitalisation due to COVID-19 was significantly lower in vaccinated patients (27.1% vs. 72.6%, p p = 0.045). Vaccinated patients were insignificantly less likely to require oxygen therapy during infection. COVID-19 mortality was significantly higher in non-vaccinated patients (15.6% vs. 5.1%, p = 0.047). The paper demonstrated a significant positive effect of vaccination against COVID-19 on a less severe clinical course of infection, lower need for hospitalisation and mortality. However, the results need to be evaluated even in the context of new antivirals and monoclonal antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 or virus mutations with different biological behaviour.