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Functional antibody and T cell immunity following SARS-CoV-2 infection, including by variants of concern, in patients with cancer: the CAPTURE study

Authors :
Lisa Pickering
Richard Stone
Ian Chau
James I. MacRae
Karla Lingard
Susana Banerjee
Barry Ward
Jessica Bazin
William Gordon
Naureen Starling
Katalin A. Wilkinson
Mary O'Brien
Anna Robinson
Joanne Droney
Sacheen Kumar
Emma Nicholson
Martin Pule
Isla Leslie
Andreas M. Schmitt
Ambrosius P. Snijders
Karolina Rzeniewicz
Emma Nye
Benjamin Shum
Mary Mangwende
Scott Shepherd
Nalinie Joharatnam-Hogan
Robyn L. Shea
Michael Howell
Anthony J. Swerdlow
Shaman Jhanji
Simon Caidan
Eleanor Carlyle
Laura Amanda Boos
Annika Fendler
Kevin W. Ng
Kate Tatham
Leila Mekkaoui
Tim Slattery
Margaret Crawford
Firza Gronthoud
Philip Hobson
Camila Gomes
Robert J. Wilkinson
Jerome Nicod
Charles Swanton
Mike Gavrielides
Kim Edmonds
Robin L. Jones
Fiona Byrne
Laura Cubitt
Alison Reid
Lucy Holt
Ana Agua-Doce
Ruth Harvey
Sarah Sarker
Spyridon Gennatas
Camille L. Gerard
Andrew Furness
Hamid Ahmod
Liam Welsh
Nicholas van As
Olivia Curtis
Nadia Yousaf
Mary Wu
Nicholas C. Turner
Christina Messiou
David Cunningham
Zayd Tippu
Georgina H. Cornish
Sonia Gandhi
Helen R. Flynn
Harshil Patel
Yasir Khan
James Larkin
Lewis Au
George Kassiotis
Samra Turajlic
Maddalena Cerrone
Clemency Stephenson
Steve Gamblin
Kate Young
Wenyi Xie
Shreerang Bhide
Robert L. Goldstone
Alicia Okines
Kevin J. Harrington
Lyra Del Rosario
Wellcome Trust
Source :
Nature Cancer, Research Square, article-version (status) pre, article-version (number) 1
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Patients with cancer have higher COVID-19 morbidity and mortality. Here we present the prospective CAPTURE study, integrating longitudinal immune profiling with clinical annotation. Of 357 patients with cancer, 118 were SARS-CoV-2 positive, 94 were symptomatic and 2 died of COVID-19. In this cohort, 83% patients had S1-reactive antibodies and 82% had neutralizing antibodies against wild type SARS-CoV-2, whereas neutralizing antibody titers against the Alpha, Beta and Delta variants were substantially reduced. S1-reactive antibody levels decreased in 13% of patients, whereas neutralizing antibody titers remained stable for up to 329 days. Patients also had detectable SARS-CoV-2-specific T cells and CD4+ responses correlating with S1-reactive antibody levels, although patients with hematological malignancies had impaired immune responses that were disease and treatment specific, but presented compensatory cellular responses, further supported by clinical recovery in all but one patient. Overall, these findings advance the understanding of the nature and duration of the immune response to SARS-CoV-2 in patients with cancer.

Details

ISSN :
26621347
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0eef71b2b486172695e66489274fd56a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43018-021-00275-9