Cancers (Sep 2022)

Immune Profiling Uncovers Memory T-Cell Responses with a Th17 Signature in Cancer Patients with Previous SARS-CoV-2 Infection Followed by mRNA Vaccination

  • Miriam Echaide,
  • Ibone Labiano,
  • Marina Delgado,
  • Angela Fernández de Lascoiti,
  • Patricia Ochoa,
  • Maider Garnica,
  • Pablo Ramos,
  • Luisa Chocarro,
  • Leticia Fernández,
  • Hugo Arasanz,
  • Ana Bocanegra,
  • Ester Blanco,
  • Sergio Piñeiro-Hermida,
  • Pilar Morente,
  • Ruth Vera,
  • Maria Alsina,
  • David Escors,
  • Grazyna Kochan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14184464
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 18
p. 4464

Abstract

Read online

It is unclear whether patients with cancer present inherently impaired responses to COVID-19 and vaccination due to their treatments, neoplastic diseases or both. To address this question, immune profiling was performed in three cohorts of healthy donors and oncologic patients: infected with SARS-CoV-2, BNT162b2-vaccinated, and with previous COVID-19 disease and subsequently vaccinated. Cancer patients showed good antibody responses to vaccination, but poor induction of T-cell responses towards the S protein when compared to infection. Following natural infection, the major targets for T-cells were the SARS-CoV-2 structural proteins M and S, but not the N protein. Similar to antibody titers, the T-cell responses quickly decayed after six months post-vaccination. Significant memory T-cell expansion was observed in vaccinated donors only if previously diagnosed with COVID-19 before undergoing vaccination. Oncologic patients with previous COVID-19 followed by vaccination exhibited potent IL-17+ CD4 and CD8 T-cell responses and elevated numbers of circulating neutrophils in peripheral blood.

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