2nd paper π°π° Vaccine Cohort π We analysed vaccine responses in 585 patients with cancer after COVID-19 vaccination, measuring neutralising responses against the original SARS-CoV-2 and variants of concern (incl. Delta) and T cell responses (1/11)
After two doses of either Pfizer-BionTech or Oxford-AstraZeneca, 83% of infection-naΓ―ve patients with cancer developed antibodies against the original strain, but only 54% of those had neutralising antibodies against Delta (2/11)
Importantly, we show that while the proportion of patients with S1-reactive antibodies is concordant to patients with NAb against WT SARS-CoV-2 it can overestimate neutralising responses against variants of concern (3/11)
Patients with blood cancer were less likely to have neutralising antibodies against Delta than patients with solid cancer (31% blood cancer, 62% solid cancer). Apart from anti-CD20, cancer therapies did not negatively impact neutralising responses (4/11)
Following 2 vaccine doses, patients previously infected with SARS-CoV-2 had higher neutralising responses against Delta than those without previous infection. This lends support for boosters in patients with cancer, especially patients with blood cancers (5/11)
Patient age and vaccine type associated with neutralising responses independent of cancer type, suggesting that patient age and prior vaccine type can also guide prioritisation for booster doses (6/11)
79% of cancer patients had detectable T cell responses independent of cancer type incl. patients without NAb. T cells may offer a level of protection, in keeping with our finding that patients with blood cancer recovered from COVID-19, in the absence of NAb (7/11)
Our data highlight that patients with cancer, but ESPECIALLY blood cancers, should be prioritised for booster doses ππ¨ Variants of concern, especially in times of high community transmission, pose an increased risk for patients with cancer (8/11)
Our data suggest that patients with cancer, but esp. blood cancer should continue to take precautions in high-risk situations. Simple public health measures, such as mask mandates on public transport & indoor spaces may help protect all vulnerable groups, and their carers (9/11)
Summary β Most cancer patients have functional immune responses to vaccine/after infection but some with blood cancer may not β 3rd doses likely to be beneficial even against Delta β High community transmissions will impact the more vulnerable π·π·π·(10/11)
Going forward, we are looking at breakthrough infections π‘οΈand functional immune responses to 3rd dose vaccines πππ & established the #InternationalCancerCOVID19Vaccine #ICCV consortium @VriesElisabeth @HaanenJohn @myESMO @ASCO @ASCOpost (11/11)
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