Abstract
Background
We studied whether comorbid conditions impact strength and duration of immune responses after SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination in a US-based, adult population.
Methods
Sera (pre-and-post-BNT162b2 vaccination) were tested serially up to 12 months after two doses of vaccine for SARS-CoV-2-anti-Spike neutralizing capacity by pseudotyping assay in 124 individuals; neutralizing titers were correlated to clinical variables with multivariate regression. Post-booster (third dose) effect was measured at 1 and 3 months in 72 and 88 subjects respectively.
Results
After completion of primary vaccine series, neutralizing antibody IC50 values were high at one month (14-fold increase from pre-vaccination), declined at six months (3.3-fold increase), and increased at one month post-booster (41.5-fold increase). Three months post-booster, IC50 decreased in COVID-naïve individuals (18-fold increase) and increased in prior COVID-19 + individuals (132-fold increase). Age >65 years (β=-0.94, p = 0.001) and malignancy (β=-0.88, p = 0.002) reduced strength of response at 1 month. Both neutralization strength and durability at 6 months, respectively, were negatively impacted by end-stage renal disease [(β=-1.10, p = 0.004); (β=-0.66, p = 0.014)], diabetes mellitus [(β=-0.57, p = 0.032); (β=-0.44, p = 0.028)], and systemic steroid use [(β=-0.066, p = 0.032); (β=-0.55, p = 0.037)]. Post-booster IC50 was robust against WA-1 and B.1.617.2. Post-booster neutralization increased with prior COVID-19 (β = 2.9, p-value < 0.0001), and malignancy reduced neutralization response (β=-0.68, p = 0.03), regardless of infection status.
Conclusion
Multiple clinical factors impact the strength and duration of neutralization response post-primary series vaccination, but not the post-booster dose strength. Malignancy was associated with lower booster-dose response regardless of prior COVID infection, suggesting a need for clinically guided vaccine regimens.