COVID-19 and protection of vaccination in patients with systemic sclerosis–associated interstitial lung disease

Author:

Panopoulos Stylianos1ORCID,Tzilas Vasilios2,Bournia Vasiliki-Kalliopi1,Karamanakos Anastasios1,Laskari Katerina1,Bouros Demosthenes13,Tektonidou Maria1,Sfikakis Petros P.1

Affiliation:

1. 1st Department of Propaedeutic and Internal Medicine and Joint Academic Rheumatology Program, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Laikon Hospital, Athens, Greece

2. 5th Respiratory Medicine Department, “Sotiria” Chest Diseases Hospital, Athens, Greece

3. Medical Center, Athens, Greece

Abstract

Objectives: Data on COVID-19 in patients with interstitial lung disease are scarce and whether SARS-CoV-2 may trigger interstitial lung disease progression remains unknown. We aimed to analyze outcomes of COVID-19 in patients with systemic sclerosis–associated interstitial lung disease, including possible thoracic radiographic progression. Patients and Methods: All 43 patients with systemic sclerosis–associated interstitial lung disease followed in our center (mean ± SD, 55.2 ± 11.6 years, 36 female) with confirmed SARS-CoV2 infection up to 1 September 2022 were analyzed. Individual interstitial lung disease extent on high resolution CT (HRCT) performed before (up to 3 months) and after COVID-19 (2–5 months) was compared. Results: At SARS-CoV-2 infection, 9/43 patients were unvaccinated, whereas 5, 26, and 3 had received 2, 3, or 4 doses of an mRNA vaccine, respectively. Thirty-one patients were either on monotherapy with immunosuppressives (mycophenolate, n = 7; cyclophosphamide, n = 2; methotrexate, n = 10; tocilizumab, n = 7; rituximab, n = 1; etanercept, n = 1), or their combinations ( n = 3). Eight patients (20%), of whom four unvaccinated, required hospitalization for pneumonia and three (7%) died of acute respiratory failure ( n = 2, both unvaccinated) or cardiac arrest. Lack of vaccination was the only independent predictor for hospitalization (OR = 7.98, 95% CI: 1.25–51.09) and marginally for death (OR = 32.7, 95% CI: 0.97–1110.98), regardless of the presence of diffuse systemic sclerosis, interstitial lung disease extent greater than 20% or immunosuppressive treatment. In 22 patients with available HRCT pairs (vaccinated = 20), the interstitial lung disease extent before COVID-19 (20.4%± 17.8%) remained unchanged (22.4% ± 18.5%) in all but one patient. Conclusion: SARS-CoV-2 vaccination is of outmost importance for every systemic sclerosis patient with interstitial lung disease. COVID-19 does not seem to promote progression of systemic sclerosis–associated interstitial lung disease in vaccinated patients, but further studies are warranted.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Immunology,Rheumatology,Immunology and Allergy

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