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Effect of a 2-week interruption in methotrexate treatment versus continued treatment on COVID-19 booster vaccine immunity in adults with inflammatory conditions (VROOM study): a randomised, open label, superiority trial

Authors :
Abhishek Abhishek
Rosemary J Boyton
Nicholas Peckham
Áine McKnight
Laura C Coates
James Bluett
Vicki Barber
Lucy Cureton
Anne Francis
Duncan Appelbe
Lucy Eldridge
Patrick Julier
Ana M Valdes
Tim Brooks
Ines Rombach
Daniel M Altmann
Jonathan S Nguyen-Van-Tam
Hywel C Williams
Jonathan A Cook
Ira Pande
Ting Seng Tang
Gui Tran
Alison Layton
Elizabeth Price
Lindsay Whittam
Srinivasan Venkatachalam
Ashley Hawarden
Gwenan Huws
Arthur Pratt
Nick J Reynolds
David Walsh
Theresa Joseph
Rengi Mathew
Stamatios Oikonomou
Catherine Gwynne
Rory Crowder
Vadivelu Saravanan
Alaa Mustafa
Cristina Tacu
Thomas Batty
Emmanuel George
Anushka Soni
Sarah Horton
Ayesha Madan
Karl Gaffney
Agnieszka Lapin
Sarah Bingham
Nick Levell
Edwin Lim
Nicola Gullick
Chris Holroyd
Salema Khalid
May Lwin
Mike Green
Laura Hunt
Nicola Alcorn
Rob Ellis
Samantha Hider
Alaa Hassan
Taryn Youngstein
Karen Douglas
Gen Nen Ho
Kirsty Levasseur
Sara Treacy
Myrto Cheila
John Pradeep
Ceril Rhys-Dillon
Catrin Jones
investigators, VROOM study
Medical Research Council (MRC)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

Background Immunosuppressive treatments inhibit vaccine-induced immunity against SARS-CoV-2. We evaluated whether a 2-week interruption of methotrexate treatment immediately after the COVID-19 vaccine booster improved antibody responses against the S1 receptor-binding domain (S1-RBD) of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein compared with uninterrupted treatment in patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases. Methods We did an open-label, prospective, two-arm, parallel-group, multicentre, randomised, controlled, superiority trial in 26 hospitals in the UK. We recruited adults from rheumatology and dermatology clinics who had been diagnosed with an immune-mediated inflammatory disease (eg, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis with or without arthritis, axial spondyloarthritis, atopic dermatitis, polymyalgia rheumatica, and systemic lupus erythematosus) and who were taking low-dose weekly methotrexate (≤25 mg per week) for at least 3 months. Participants also had to have received two primary vaccine doses from the UK COVID-19 vaccination programme. We randomly assigned the participants (1:1), using a centralised validated computer randomisation program, to suspend methotrexate treatment for 2 weeks immediately after their COVID-19 booster (suspend methotrexate group) or to continue treatment as usual (continue methotrexate group). Participants, investigators, clinical research staff, and data analysts were unmasked, while researchers doing the laboratory analyses were masked to group assignment. The primary outcome was S1-RBD antibody titres 4 weeks after receiving the COVID-19 booster vaccine dose, assessed in the intention-to-treat population. This trial is registered with ISRCT, ISRCTN11442263; following the pre-planned interim analysis, recruitment was stopped early. Findings Between Sept 30, 2021 and March 3, 2022, we recruited 340 participants, of whom 254 were included in the interim analysis and had been randomly assigned to one of the two groups: 127 in the continue methotrexate group and 127 in the suspend methotrexate group. Their mean age was 59·1 years, 155 (61%) were female, 130 (51%) had rheumatoid arthritis, and 86 (34%) had psoriasis with or without arthritis. After 4 weeks, the geometric mean S1-RBD antibody titre was 22 750 U/mL (95% CI 19 314–26 796) in the suspend methotrexate group and 10 798 U/mL (8970–12 997) in the continue methotrexate group, with a geometric mean ratio (GMR) of 2·19 (95% CI 1·57–3·04; p Interpretation A 2-week interruption of methotrexate treatment for people with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases resulted in enhanced boosting of antibody responses after COVID-19 vaccination. This intervention is simple, low-cost, and easy to implement, and could potentially translate to increased vaccine efficacy and duration of protection for susceptible groups. Funding National Institute for Health and Care Research.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11442263
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....01e707c09d69622338b264b5f7f9c91f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s2213-2600(22)00186-2