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Data from Patients Recently Treated for B-lymphoid Malignancies Show Increased Risk of Severe COVID-19

Authors :
Michael A. Thompson
Jeremy L. Warner
Leyre Zubiri
Trisha M. Wise-Draper
Pallawi Torka
Christopher Su
Aditi Shastri
Sumit A. Shah
Andrew Schmidt
Rachel Rosovski
Pedram Razavi
Matthew M. Puc
Andrew J. Portuguese
Hyma V. Polimera
Adam J. Olszewski
Taylor K. Nonato
Amanda Nizam
Gayathri Nagaraj
Rana R. McKay
Gary H. Lyman
Xuanyi Li
Eric Lau
Tahir Latif
Chris Labaki
Daniel H. Kwon
Nicole M. Kuderer
Vadim S. Koshkin
Elizabeth J. Klein
Anup Kasi
Monika Joshi
Nathalie A. Johnson
Clara Hwang
Daniel Hausrath
Shilpa Gupta
Christopher R. Friese
Devendra KC
Jacob C. Cogan
Cecilia A. Castellano
Mehmet Asim Bilen
Stephanie Berg
Babar Bashir
Ziad Bakouny
Joy Awosika
Sarit E. Assouline
Melissa Accordino
Alicia Beeghly-Fadiel
Matthias Weiss
Catherine Stratton
Keith E. Stockerl-Goldstein
R. Alejandro Sica
Dimpy P. Shah
Daniel P. Mundt
Sanjay Mishra
Ruben A. Mesa
Shailesh Advani
Yu Shyr
Chih-Yuan Hsu
Ryan C. Lynch
Divaya Bhutani
Samuel M. Rubinstein
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Patients with B-lymphoid malignancies have been consistently identified as a population at high risk of severe COVID-19. Whether this is exclusively due to cancer-related deficits in humoral and cellular immunity, or whether risk of severe COVID-19 is increased by anticancer therapy, is uncertain. Using data derived from the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19), we show that patients treated for B-lymphoid malignancies have an increased risk of severe COVID-19 compared with control populations of patients with non–B-lymphoid malignancies. Among patients with B-lymphoid malignancies, those who received anticancer therapy within 12 months of COVID-19 diagnosis experienced increased COVID-19 severity compared with patients with non–recently treated B-lymphoid malignancies, after adjustment for cancer status and several other prognostic factors. Our findings suggest that patients recently treated for a B-lymphoid malignancy are at uniquely high risk for severe COVID-19.Significance:Our study suggests that recent therapy for a B-lymphoid malignancy is an independent risk factor for COVID-19 severity. These findings provide rationale to develop mitigation strategies targeted at the uniquely high-risk population of patients with recently treated B-lymphoid malignancies.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 171

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5a8d5a0ca3f513af54198bd82bbe3af3