CD20-Targeted Therapy Ablates De Novo Antibody Response to Vaccination but Spares Preestablished Immunity

Author:

Shree Tanaya1ORCID,Shankar Vishnu2,Lohmeyer Julian J.K.1ORCID,Czerwinski Debra K.1,Schroers-Martin Joseph G.1ORCID,Rodriguez Gladys M.1,Beygi Sara1,Kanegai Alyssa M.1,Corbelli Karen S.1ORCID,Gabriel Etelka1,Kurtz David M.1ORCID,Khodadoust Michael S.1ORCID,Gupta Neel K.1,Maeda Lauren S.1,Advani Ranjana H.1,Alizadeh Ash A.1ORCID,Levy Ronald1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Division of Oncology, Department of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California.

2. 2Program in Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.

Abstract

Abstract To obtain a deeper understanding of poor responses to COVID-19 vaccination in patients with lymphoma, we assessed blocking antibodies, total anti-spike IgG, and spike-specific memory B cells in the peripheral blood of 126 patients with lymphoma and 20 age-matched healthy controls 1 and 4 months after COVID-19 vaccination. Fifty-five percent of patients developed blocking antibodies postvaccination, compared with 100% of controls. When evaluating patients last treated from days to nearly 18 years prior to vaccination, time since last anti-CD20 was a significant independent predictor of vaccine response. None of 31 patients who had received anti-CD20 treatment within 6 months prior to vaccination developed blocking antibodies. In contrast, patients who initiated anti-CD20 treatment shortly after achieving a vaccine-induced antibody response tended to retain that response during treatment, suggesting a policy of immunizing prior to treatment whenever possible. Significance: In a large cohort of patients with B-cell lymphoma, time since anti-CD20 treatment was an independent predictor of neutralizing antibody response to COVID-19 vaccination. Comparing patients who received anti-CD20 treatment before or after vaccination, we demonstrate that vaccinating first can generate an antibody response that endures through anti-CD20–containing treatment. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 85

Funder

Leukemia & Lymphoma Society

NIH

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

General Medicine

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