Clinical efficacy of the first two doses of anti‐SARS‐CoV‐2 mRNA vaccines in solid cancer patients

Author:

Cona Maria Silvia1ORCID,Riva Agostino23,Dalu Davide1,Gabrieli Arianna3,Fasola Cinzia1,Lipari Giuseppe3,Pozza Giacomo2,Rulli Eliana4,Galli Francesca4,Ruggieri Lorenzo1ORCID,Masedu Elsa1,Parma Gaia1,Chizzoniti Davide1,Gambaro Anna1,Ferrario Sabrina1,Antista Maria1,De Monte Matteo1,Tarkowski Maciej S.3,La Verde Nicla1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Oncology Sacco Hospital, ASST Fatebenefratelli Sacco Milan Italy

2. Department of Infectious Diseases, Sacco Hospital ASST Fatebenefratelli Sacco Milan Italy

3. Luigi Sacco Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences DIBIC University of Milan Milan Italy

4. Laboratory of Methodology for Clinical Research Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri IRCCS Milan Italy

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionCancer patients are frail individuals, thus the prevention of SARS‐CoV‐2 infection is essential. To date, vaccination is the most effective tool to prevent COVID‐19. In a previous study, we evaluated the immunogenicity of two doses of mRNA‐based vaccines (BNT162b2 or mRNA‐1273) in solid cancer patients. We found that seroconversion rate in cancer patients without a previous exposure to SARS‐CoV‐2 was lower than in healthy controls (66.7% vs. 95%, p = 0.0020). The present study aimed to evaluate the clinical efficacy of the vaccination in the same population.MethodsThis is a single‐institution, prospective observational study. Data were collected through a predefined questionnaire through phone call in the period between the second and third vaccine dose. The primary objective was to describe the clinical efficacy of the vaccination, defined as the percentage of vaccinated subjects who did not develop symptomatic COVID‐19 within 6 months after the second dose. The secondary objective was to describe the clinical features of patients who developed COVID‐19.ResultsFrom January to June 2021, 195 cancer patients were enrolled. Considering that 7 (3.59%) patients tested positive for SARS‐CoV‐2 and 5 developed symptomatic disease, the clinical efficacy of the vaccination was 97.4%. COVID‐19 disease in most patients was mild and managed at home; only one hospitalization was recorded and no patient required hospitalization in the intensive care unit.DiscussionOur study suggests that increasing vaccination coverage, including booster doses, could improve the prevention of infection, hospitalization, serious illness, and death in the frail population of cancer patients.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology

Reference35 articles.

1. WHO declares COVID‐19 a pandemic;Cucinotta D;Acta Biomed.,2020

2. https://www.who.int/director‐general/speeches/detail/who‐director‐general‐s‐opening‐remarks‐at‐the‐media‐briefing‐on‐covid‐19‐11‐march‐2020visited in October 21 2022

3. https://covid19.who.int/Accessed October 21 2022

4. Cancer patients in SARS-CoV-2 infection: a nationwide analysis in China

5. Outcomes of COVID-19 in Patients With Cancer: Report From the National COVID Cohort Collaborative (N3C)

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