Journal of Translational Autoimmunity (Dec 2023)

Impact of COVID-19 and vaccination campaign on 1,755 systemic sclerosis patients during first three years of pandemic. Possible risks for individuals with impaired immunoreactivity to vaccine, ongoing immunomodulating treatments, and disease-related lung involvement during the next pandemic phase

  • Clodoveo Ferri,
  • Vincenzo Raimondo,
  • Dilia Giuggioli,
  • Laura Gragnani,
  • Serena Lorini,
  • Lorenzo Dagna,
  • Silvia Laura Bosello,
  • Rosario Foti,
  • Valeria Riccieri,
  • Serena Guiducci,
  • Giovanna Cuomo,
  • Antonio Tavoni,
  • Rossella De Angelis,
  • Fabio Cacciapaglia,
  • Elisabetta Zanatta,
  • Franco Cozzi,
  • Giuseppe Murdaca,
  • Ilaria Cavazzana,
  • Nicoletta Romeo,
  • Veronica Codullo,
  • Roberta Pellegrini,
  • Giuseppe Varcasia,
  • Maria De Santis,
  • Carlo Selmi,
  • Giuseppina Abignano,
  • Maurizio Caminiti,
  • Massimo L'Andolina,
  • Domenico Olivo,
  • Ennio Lubrano,
  • Amelia Spinella,
  • Federica Lumetti,
  • Giacomo De Luca,
  • Piero Ruscitti,
  • Teresa Urraro,
  • Marcella Visentini,
  • Silvia Bellando-Randone,
  • Elisa Visalli,
  • Davide Testa,
  • Gabriella Sciascia,
  • Francesco Masini,
  • Greta Pellegrino,
  • Francesca Saccon,
  • Eugenia Balestri,
  • Giusy Elia,
  • Silvia Martina Ferrari,
  • Antonio Tonutti,
  • Francesca Dall’Ara,
  • Giuseppa Pagano Mariano,
  • Giorgio Pettiti,
  • Giovanni Zanframundo,
  • Raffaele Brittelli,
  • Vincenzo Aiello,
  • Ylenia Dal Bosco,
  • Roberta Foti,
  • Ilenia Di Cola,
  • Daniela Scorpiniti,
  • Enrico Fusaro,
  • Tommaso Ferrari,
  • Pietro Gigliotti,
  • Corrado Campochiaro,
  • Francesca Francioso,
  • Carlo Iandoli,
  • Virginia Caira,
  • Anna Linda Zignego,
  • Salvatore D'Angelo,
  • Franco Franceschini,
  • Marco Matucci-Cerinic,
  • Roberto Giacomelli,
  • Andrea Doria,
  • Stefano Angelo Santini,
  • Poupak Fallahi,
  • Florenzo Iannone,
  • Alessandro Antonelli

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
p. 100212

Abstract

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Introduction: The impact of COVID-19 pandemic represents a serious challenge for ‘frail’ patients' populations with inflammatory autoimmune systemic diseases such as systemic sclerosis (SSc). We investigated the prevalence and severity of COVID-19, as well the effects of COVID-19 vaccination campaign in a large series of SSc patients followed for the entire period (first 38 months) of pandemic. Patients and method: This prospective survey study included 1755 unselected SSc patients (186 M, 1,569F; mean age 58.7 ± 13.4SD years, mean disease duration 8.8 ± 7.3SD years) recruited in part by telephone survey at 37 referral centers from February 2020 to April 2023. The following parameters were carefully evaluated: i. demographic, clinical, serological, and therapeutical features; ii. prevalence and severity of COVID-19; and iii. safety, immunogenicity, and efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines. Results: The prevalence of COVID-19 recorded during the whole pandemic was significantly higher compared to Italian general population (47.3 % vs 43.3 %, p < 0.000), as well the COVID-19-related mortality (1.91 % vs 0.72 %, p < 0.001). As regards the putative prognostic factors of worse outcome, COVID-19 positive patients with SSc-related interstitial lung involvement showed significantly higher percentage of COVID-19-related hospitalization compared to those without (5.85 % vs 1.73 %; p < 0.0001), as well as of mortality rate (2.01 % vs 0.4 %; p = 0.002). Over half of patients (56.3 %) received the first two plus one booster dose of vaccine; while a fourth dose was administered to 35.6 %, and only few of them (1.99 %) had five or more doses of vaccine. Of note, an impaired seroconversion was recorded in 25.6 % of individuals after the first 2 doses of vaccine, and in 8.4 % of patients also after the booster dose. Furthermore, the absence of T-cell immunoreactivity was observed in 3/7 patients tested by QuantiFERON® SARSCoV-2 Starter Set (Qiagen). The efficacy of vaccines, evaluated by comparing the COVID-19-related death rate recorded during pre- and post-vaccination pandemic periods, revealed a quite stable outcome in SSc patients (death rate from 2.54 % to 1.76 %; p = ns), despite the significant drop of mortality observed in the Italian general population (from 2.95 % to 0.29 %; p < 0.0001). Conclusions: An increased COVID-19 prevalence and mortality rate was recorded in SSc patients; moreover, the efficacy of vaccines in term of improved outcomes was less evident in SSc compared to Italian general population. This discrepancy might be explained by concomitant adverse prognostic factors: increased rate of non-responders to vaccine in SSc series, low percentage of individuals with four or more doses of vaccine, ongoing immunomodulating treatments, disease-related interstitial lung disease, and/or reduced preventive measures in the second half of pandemic. A careful monitoring of response to COVID-19 vaccines together with adequate preventive/therapeutical strategies are highly recommendable in the near course of pandemic in this frail patients’ population.

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