Back to Search Start Over

Vaccination Ameliorates Cellular Inflammatory Responses in SARS-CoV-2 Breakthrough Infections

Authors :
Huapaya, Julio A
Higgins, Jeanette
Kanth, Shreya
Demirkale, Cumhur Y
Gairhe, Salina
Aboye, Etsubdink A
Regenold, David
Sahagun, Seynt Jiro
Pastor, Gloria
Swaim, Doris
Dewar, Robin
Rehman, Tauseef
Highbarger, Helene C
Lallemand, Perrine
Laverdure, Sylvain
Adelsberger, Joseph
Rupert, Adam
Li, Willy
Krack, Janell
Teferi, Gebeyehu
Kuruppu, Janaki
Strich, Jeffrey R
Davey, Richard
Childs, Richard
Chertow, Daniel
Kovacs, Joseph A
Barnett, Christopher
Torabi-Parizi, Parizad
Suffredini, Anthony F
Source :
J Infect Dis
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2023.

Abstract

BackgroundData on cellular immune responses in persons with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection following vaccination are limited. The evaluation of these patients with SARS-CoV-2 breakthrough infections may provide insight into how vaccinations limit the escalation of deleterious host inflammatory responses.MethodsWe conducted a prospective study of peripheral blood cellular immune responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection in 21 vaccinated patients, all with mild disease, and 97 unvaccinated patients stratified based on disease severity.ResultsWe enrolled 118 persons (aged 50 years [SD 14.5 years], 52 women) with SARS-CoV-2 infection. Compared to unvaccinated patients, vaccinated patients with breakthrough infections had a higher percentage of antigen-presenting monocytes (HLA-DR+), mature monocytes (CD83+), functionally competent T cells (CD127+), and mature neutrophils (CD10+); and lower percentages of activated T cells (CD38+), activated neutrophils (CD64+), and immature B cells (CD127+CD19+). These differences widened with increased disease severity in unvaccinated patients. Longitudinal analysis showed that cellular activation decreased over time but persisted in unvaccinated patients with mild disease at 8-month follow-up.ConclusionsPatients with SARS-CoV-2 breakthrough infections exhibit cellular immune responses that limit the progression of inflammatory responses and suggest mechanisms by which vaccination limits disease severity. These data may have implications for developing more effective vaccines and therapies.Clinical Trials Registration . NCT04401449.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
J Infect Dis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....61109b4b208f1a6955998c64de43fce3