Association of Lower Antispike Antibody Levels with Mortality in ICU Patients with COVID-19 Disease

Author:

Yelle Sangeeta1ORCID,Amte Rahul1ORCID,Gella Vishwanath2ORCID,Mitnala Sasikala3ORCID,Gujjarlapudi Deepika4ORCID,Ismail Mohammed3ORCID,Thankachan Ledo3ORCID,Adla Sandhyarani3ORCID,Unnisa Fatima3ORCID,Reddy Sivakumar1ORCID,Reddy Duvvur Nageshwar5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Critical Care Medicine, Asian Institute of Gastroenterology, Hyderabad, India

2. Pulmonology, Asian Institute of Gastroenterology, Hyderabad, India

3. Research Department, Asian Institute of Gastroenterology, Hyderabad, India

4. Biochemistry, Asian Institute of Gastroenterology, Hyderabad, India

5. Asian Institute of Gastroenterology, Hyderabad, India

Abstract

Background. Though vaccines have been reported as highly efficacious in preventing severe COVID-19 disease, there is emerging data of severe infections, albeit a small number, in vaccinated individuals. We have conducted a retrospective observational study to assess the clinical characteristics, immunological response, and disease outcomes among the vaccinated and unvaccinated patients admitted to the ICU with severe COVID-19 disease. Methods. Study Design and Participants. We conducted a retrospective observational study in COVID ICU of a tertiary care hospital. Data were collected from the month of 1 April 2021 to 31 November 2021. All adult patients admitted to the ICU having severe COVID-19 disease were included in the study. Data were collected from the medical records database which included demographics, a clinical course in the ICU, laboratory and radiological parameters, and disease outcomes. In a subset of patients, cell-mediated immunity and S1S2-neutralising antibody assessment was done. Results. A total of 419 patients with severe COVID-19 were included in the study. Of the 419 patients, 90 (21.5%) were vaccinated, and 329 (78.5%) were unvaccinated. There was a significantly higher mortality in unvaccinated severe COVID 19 patients as compared to vaccinated severe COVID patients (46.2% vs 34.4%; P < 0.0455 ). The neutralizing antibody titre was significantly higher in survivors as compared to nonsurvivors (2139.8, SE ± 713.3 vs 471, SE ± 154.4); P < 0.026 . Conclusion. Our study suggests the association of lower neutralizing antibody levels with mortality in ICU patients admitted with COVID-19 breakthrough infections.

Funder

Asian Healthcare Foundation

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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