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A comprehensive assessment of long-term SARS-CoV-2-specific adaptive immune memory in convalescent COVID-19 Solid Organ Transplant recipients

Authors :
Alexandre Favà
Laura Donadeu
Thomas Jouve
José Gonzalez-Costello
Laura Lladó
Carolina Santana
Néstor Toapanta
Manuel Lopez
Vincent Pernin
Carme Facundo
Nuria Serra Cabañas
Olivier Thaunat
Marta Crespo
Laura Llinàs-Mallol
Ignacio Revuelta
Nuria Sabé
Alexander Rombauts
Laura Calatayud
Carmen Ardanuy
Juliana Esperalba
Candela Fernandez
Juan J. Lozano
Rosemarie Preyer
Kevin Strecker
Carlos Couceiro
Elena García-Romero
Alba Cachero
Maria Meneghini
Alba Torija
Moglie Le Quintrec
Edoardo Melilli
Josep Maria Cruzado
Carolina Polo
Francesc Moreso
Elena Crespo
Oriol Bestard
Source :
Kidney International
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Long-term adaptive immune memory has been reported among immunocompetent individuals up to eight months following SARS-CoV-2 infection. However, limited data is available in convalescent patients with a solid organ transplant. To investigate this, we performed a thorough evaluation of adaptive immune memory at different compartments (serological, memory B cells and cytokine [IFN-γ, IL-2, IFN-γ/IL2 and IL-21] producing T cells) specific to SARS-CoV-2 by ELISA and FluoroSpot-based assays in 102 convalescent patients (53 with a solid organ transplants (38 kidney, 5 liver, 5 lung and 5 heart transplant) and 49 immunocompetent controls) with different clinical COVID-19 severity (severe, mild and asymptomatic) beyond six months after infection. While similar detectable memory responses at different immune compartments were detected between those with a solid organ transplant and immunocompetent individuals, these responses were predominantly driven by distinct COVID-19 clinical severities (97.6%, 80.5% and 42.1%, all significantly different, were seropositive; 84% vs 75% vs 35.7%, all significantly different, showed IgG-producing memory B cells and 82.5%, 86.9% and 31.6%, displayed IFN-γ producing T cells; in severe, mild and asymptomatic convalescent patients, respectively). Notably, patients with a solid organ transplant with longer time after transplantation did more likely show detectable long-lasting immune memory, regardless of COVID-19 severity. Thus, our study shows that patients with a solid organ transplant are capable of maintaining long-lasting peripheral immune memory after COVID-19 infection; mainly determined by the degree of infection severity.<br />Graphical abstract

Details

ISSN :
15231755
Volume :
101
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kidney international
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....526a48aa690a17e621c2e82040b281f2