SARS-CoV-2 infection, vaccination, and antibody response trajectories in adults: a cohort study in Catalonia

Author:

Karachaliou MariannaORCID,Moncunill Gemma,Espinosa Ana,Castaño-Vinyals Gemma,Rubio Rocío,Vidal Marta,Jiménez Alfons,Prados Esther,Carreras Anna,Cortés Beatriz,Blay Natàlia,Bañuls Marc,Pleguezuelos Vanessa,Melero Natalia Rodrigo,Serra Pau,Parras Daniel,Izquierdo Luis,Santamaría Pere,Carolis Carlo,Papantoniou Kyriaki,Goldberg Ximena,Aguilar Ruth,Garcia-Aymerich Judith,de Cid Rafael,Kogevinas Manolis,Dobaño Carlota

Abstract

Abstract Background Heterogeneity of the population in relation to infection, COVID-19 vaccination, and host characteristics is likely reflected in the underlying SARS-CoV-2 antibody responses. Methods We measured IgM, IgA, and IgG levels against SARS-CoV-2 spike and nucleocapsid antigens in 1076 adults of a cohort study in Catalonia between June and November 2020 and a second time between May and July 2021. Questionnaire data and electronic health records on vaccination and COVID-19 testing were available in both periods. Data on several lifestyle, health-related, and sociodemographic characteristics were also available. Results Antibody seroreversion occurred in 35.8% of the 64 participants non-vaccinated and infected almost a year ago and was related to asymptomatic infection, age above 60 years, and smoking. Moreover, the analysis on kinetics revealed that among all responses, IgG RBD, IgA RBD, and IgG S2 decreased less within 1 year after infection. Among vaccinated, 2.1% did not present antibodies at the time of testing and approximately 1% had breakthrough infections post-vaccination. In the post-vaccination era, IgM responses and those against nucleoprotein were much less prevalent. In previously infected individuals, vaccination boosted the immune response and there was a slight but statistically significant increase in responses after a 2nd compared to the 1st dose. Infected vaccinated participants had superior antibody levels across time compared to naïve-vaccinated people. mRNA vaccines and, particularly the Spikevax, induced higher antibodies after 1st and 2nd doses compared to Vaxzevria or Janssen COVID-19 vaccines. In multivariable regression analyses, antibody responses after vaccination were predicted by the type of vaccine, infection age, sex, smoking, and mental and cardiovascular diseases. Conclusions Our data support that infected people would benefit from vaccination. Results also indicate that hybrid immunity results in superior antibody responses and infection-naïve people would need a booster dose earlier than previously infected people. Mental diseases are associated with less efficient responses to vaccination.

Funder

Incentius a l’Avaluació de Centres CERCA

EIT HEALTH

Fundació Privada Daniel Bravo Andreu

Institut Català de la Salut

Junta de Andalucía/EU.

Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation

Acción de Dinamización del ISCIII

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Medicine

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