Vaccine serologic responses among transplant patients associate with COVID-19 infection and T peripheral helper cells.

Journal: MedRxiv : The Preprint Server For Health Sciences
Published:
Abstract

Background: Therapeutically immunosuppressed transplant recipients exhibit attenuated responses to COVID-19 vaccines. To better understand the immune alterations that determined poor vaccine response, we correlated quantities of circulating T and B cell subsets at baseline with longitudinal serologic responses to SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination in heart and lung transplant recipients.

Methods: Samples at baseline and at approximately 8 and 30 days after each vaccine dose for 22 heart and lung transplant recipients with no history of COVID-19, four heart and lung transplant recipients with prior COVID-19 infection, and 12 healthy controls undergoing vaccination were analyzed. Anti-spike protein receptor binding domain (RBD) IgG and pseudovirus neutralization activity were measured. Proportions of B and T cell subsets at baseline were comprehensively quantitated.

Results: At 8-30 days post vaccination, healthy controls displayed robust anti-RBD IgG responses, whereas heart and lung transplant recipients showed minimally increased responses. A parallel absence of activity was observed in pseudovirus neutralization. In contrast, three of four (75%) transplant recipients with prior COVID-19 infection displayed robust responses at levels comparable to controls. Baseline levels of activated PD-1 + HLA-DR + CXCR5 - CD4 + T cells (also known as T peripheral helper [T PH ] cells) and CD4+ T cells strongly predicted the ability to mount a response.

Conclusions: Immunosuppressed patients have defective vaccine responses but can be induced to generate neutralizing antibodies after SARS-CoV-2 infection. Strong correlations of vaccine responsiveness with baseline T PH and CD4 + T cell numbers highlights a role for T helper activity in B cell differentiation into antibody secreting cells during vaccine response.

Authors
Jacob Lemieux, Amy Li, Matteo Gentili, Cory Perugino, Zoe Weiss, Kathryn Bowman, Pierre Ankomah, Hang Liu, Gregory Lewis, Natasha Bitar, Taryn Lipiner, Nir Hacohen, Shiv Pillai, Marcia Goldberg
Relevant Conditions

COVID-19