COVID-19 vaccination and breakthrough infections in patients with cancer

Andrew Schmidt(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Chris Labaki(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Chih–Yuan Hsu(Vanderbilt University), Ziad Bakouny(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Nino Balanchivadze(Henry Ford Hospital), Stephanie Berg(Loyola University Chicago), Sibel Blau(Seattle University), Ahmad Daher(Hartford Hospital), Talal El Zarif(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Christopher R. Friese(University of Michigan–Ann Arbor), Elizabeth A. Griffiths(Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center), Jessica E. Hawley(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Brandon Hayes‐Lattin(Oregon Health & Science University), Vidhya Karivedu(The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center), Tahir Latif(University of Cincinnati Medical Center), Blanche H. Mavromatis(Western Maryland Health System), Rana R. McKay(University of California, San Diego), Gayathri Nagaraj(Loma Linda University), Ryan H. Nguyen(University of Illinois Chicago), Orestis A. Panagiotou(Brown University), Andrew J. Portuguese(Seattle University), Matthew Puc(Virtua Health), Míriam Santos Dutra(Jewish General Hospital), Brett Schroeder(Virginia Mason Medical Center), Astha Thakkar(Montefiore Medical Center), Elizabeth Wulff‐Burchfield(University of Kansas), Sanjay Mishra(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Dimitrios Farmakiotis(Brown University), Yu Shyr(Vanderbilt University), Jeremy L. Warner(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Toni K. Choueiri(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Toni K. Choueiri(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Nathan Duma(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Dimitrios Farmakiotis(Brown University), Petros Grivas(Virtua Health), Gilberto Lopes(Seattle University), Corrie Painter, Solange Peters(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Brian I. Rini, Dimpy P. Shah, Michael Thompson(Brown University), Jeremy L. Warner(Vanderbilt University)
Annals of Oncology
December 24, 2021
Cited by 101Open Access
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Abstract

•Patients with cancer who develop breakthrough COVID-19 following full vaccination remain susceptible to severe outcomes.•Hematologic malignancies are over-represented among vaccinated patients with cancer who develop breakthrough COVID-19.•Vaccination of close contacts, masking, boosters, and social distancing are needed to protect patients with cancer. BackgroundVaccination is an important preventive health measure to protect against symptomatic and severe COVID-19. Impaired immunity secondary to an underlying malignancy or recent receipt of antineoplastic systemic therapies can result in less robust antibody titers following vaccination and possible risk of breakthrough infection. As clinical trials evaluating COVID-19 vaccines largely excluded patients with a history of cancer and those on active immunosuppression (including chemotherapy), limited evidence is available to inform the clinical efficacy of COVID-19 vaccination across the spectrum of patients with cancer.Patients and methodsWe describe the clinical features of patients with cancer who developed symptomatic COVID-19 following vaccination and compare weighted outcomes with those of contemporary unvaccinated patients, after adjustment for confounders, using data from the multi-institutional COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19).ResultsPatients with cancer who develop COVID-19 following vaccination have substantial comorbidities and can present with severe and even lethal infection. Patients harboring hematologic malignancies are over-represented among vaccinated patients with cancer who develop symptomatic COVID-19.ConclusionsVaccination against COVID-19 remains an essential strategy in protecting vulnerable populations, including patients with cancer. Patients with cancer who develop breakthrough infection despite full vaccination, however, remain at risk of severe outcomes. A multilayered public health mitigation approach that includes vaccination of close contacts, boosters, social distancing, and mask-wearing should be continued for the foreseeable future. Vaccination is an important preventive health measure to protect against symptomatic and severe COVID-19. Impaired immunity secondary to an underlying malignancy or recent receipt of antineoplastic systemic therapies can result in less robust antibody titers following vaccination and possible risk of breakthrough infection. As clinical trials evaluating COVID-19 vaccines largely excluded patients with a history of cancer and those on active immunosuppression (including chemotherapy), limited evidence is available to inform the clinical efficacy of COVID-19 vaccination across the spectrum of patients with cancer. We describe the clinical features of patients with cancer who developed symptomatic COVID-19 following vaccination and compare weighted outcomes with those of contemporary unvaccinated patients, after adjustment for confounders, using data from the multi-institutional COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19). Patients with cancer who develop COVID-19 following vaccination have substantial comorbidities and can present with severe and even lethal infection. Patients harboring hematologic malignancies are over-represented among vaccinated patients with cancer who develop symptomatic COVID-19. Vaccination against COVID-19 remains an essential strategy in protecting vulnerable populations, including patients with cancer. Patients with cancer who develop breakthrough infection despite full vaccination, however, remain at risk of severe outcomes. A multilayered public health mitigation approach that includes vaccination of close contacts, boosters, social distancing, and mask-wearing should be continued for the foreseeable future.


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