ACR Open Rheumatology (Sep 2024)

Duration of Postvaccination Neutralizing Antibodies to SARS‐CoV‐2 and Medication Effects: Results from the Safety and Immunogenicity of COVID‐19 Vaccination in Systemic Immune‐Mediated Inflammatory Diseases Cohort Study

  • Rami Habib,
  • Roya M. Dayam,
  • Carol Hitchon,
  • Vinod Chandran,
  • Paul R. Fortin,
  • Gilles Boire,
  • Dawn M. E. Bowdish,
  • Anne‐Claude Gingras,
  • Louis Flamand,
  • Maggie J. Larché,
  • Ines Colmegna,
  • Luck Lukusa,
  • Jennifer L. F. Lee,
  • Daniel Pereira,
  • Charles N. Bernstein,
  • Nadine Lalonde,
  • Elizabeth Turnbull,
  • Sasha Bernatsky,
  • SUCCEED investigative team

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/acr2.11697
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 9
pp. 581 – 586

Abstract

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Objective In the face of the ongoing circulation of SARS‐CoV‐2, the durability of neutralization post–COVID‐19 vaccination in immune‐mediated inflammatory disease (IMID) is a key issue, as are the effects of medications. Methods Adults (n = 112) with inflammatory bowel disease, psoriasis/psoriatic arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, spondylarthritis, and systemic lupus were recruited from participating Canadian medical centers from 2021 to 2023. We focused on log‐transformed neutralization (lentivirus methods) as a continuous outcome, with separate models for wild‐type and Omicron strains BA.1 and BA.5. Results Compared with 30 to 120 days postvaccination, subsequent periods were associated with greater neutralization in unadjusted models for wild‐type, BA.1, and BA.5 strains and against the BA.1 strain in adjusted models. Rituximab was associated with lower neutralization for the BA.1 strain in adjusted models, with a similar trend for BA.5. In methotrexate users, there were trends for less neutralization of BA.1 and BA.5 in all unadjusted models, whereas in adjusted models, there was significantly lower neutralization only for the wild type. Three or more doses and Omicron‐specific vaccines were both independently associated with better neutralization ability for all three strains. A COVID‐19 infection within six months before sampling was associated with higher neutralization of wild type and BA.1 in adjusted analyses. Anti–tumor necrosis factor agents were associated with lower neutralization ability for BA.5 in adjusted analyses. Conclusion Neutralization responses in immunosuppressed individuals with IMID were durable over time and were augmented by more than three doses and Omicron‐specific vaccines. Less neutralization was seen with certain medications. Our work clarifies the joint effects of vaccine history, infection, and medications on COVID‐19 immunity.