Neutralising antibody responses against SARS-CoV-2 Omicron BA.4/5 and wild-type virus in patients with inflammatory bowel disease following three doses of COVID-19 vaccine (VIP): a prospective, multicentre, cohort study

Zhigang Liu(Imperial College London), James L. Alexander(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), Kaixing Le(Imperial College London), Xin Zhou(Imperial College London), Hajir Ibraheim(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), Sulak Anandabaskaran(St Mark's Hospital), Aamir Saifuddin(St Mark's Hospital), Kathy Weitung Lin(Imperial College London), Leon R. McFarlane(Imperial College London), Laura Constable(Imperial College London), Rocío Seoane(Imperial College London), Nikhil Anand(Imperial College London), Claire Bewshea(University of Exeter), Rachel Nice(University of Exeter), Andrea D’Mello(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), Gareth Jones(NHS Lothian), Sharmili Balarajah(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), Francesca Fiorentino(King's College London), Shaji Sebastian(University of Hull), Peter M. Irving(King's College London), Lucy Hicks(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), Horace R. Williams(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), Alexandra Kent(King's College Hospital), Rachel Linger(University of Cambridge), Miles Parkes(University of Cambridge), Klaartje Kok(Barts Health NHS Trust), Kamal Patel(St George's Hospital), Julian Teare(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), Daniel M. Altmann(Imperial College London), Rosemary J. Boyton(Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust), Ailsa Hart(St Mark's Hospital), Charlie W. Lees(NHS Lothian), James Goodhand(University of Exeter), Nicholas A. Kennedy(University of Exeter), Katrina M. Pollock(NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre), Tariq Ahmad(University of Exeter), Nick Powell(Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust), Ijeoma Chukwurah, Sulaimaan Haq, Jonathan W. Lo(NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre), Parita Shah, Stephanie Wilken-Smith, Anitha Ramanathan, Mikin Patel(St George's Hospital), Lidia Romanczuk, Rebecca King, Jason Domingo, Djamila Shamtally, Vivien Mendoza, Joanne Sanchez, Hannah Stark, Bridget Knight, Louise Bee, Charmaine Estember, Anna Barnes, Darcy Watkins, Sam Stone, John M. Kirkwood, Marian Parkinson, Helen Gardner‐Thorpe, Kate Covil, Lauranne Derikx, Beatriz Gros Alcalde, Irish Lee(NHS Lothian), Bessie Cipriano, Giuseppe Ruocco, Manisha Baden, Graham Cooke, Evgenia Kourampa, Ciro Pasquale, Elena Robisco-Diaz, Suhaylah Bhatti
EClinicalMedicine
October 1, 2023
Cited by 8Open Access
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Abstract

Background: Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) receiving anti-TNF and JAK-inhibitor therapy have attenuated responses to COVID-19 vaccination. We aimed to determine how IBD treatments affect neutralising antibody responses against the Omicron BA.4/5 variant. Methods: In this multicentre cohort study, we prospectively recruited 340 adults (69 healthy controls and 271 IBD) at nine UK hospitals between May 28, 2021 and March 29, 2022. The IBD study population was established (>12 weeks therapy) on either thiopurine (n = 63), infliximab (n = 45), thiopurine and infliximab combination therapy (n = 48), ustekinumab (n = 45), vedolizumab (n = 46) or tofacitinib (n = 24). Patients were excluded if they were being treated with any other immunosuppressive therapies. Participants had two doses of either ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 or BNT162b2 vaccines, followed by a third dose of either BNT162b2 or mRNA1273. Pseudo-neutralisation assays against SARS-CoV-2 wild-type and BA.4/5 were performed. The half maximal inhibitory concentration (NT50) of participant sera was calculated. The primary outcome was anti-SARS-CoV-2 neutralising response against wild-type virus and Omicron BA.4/5 variant after the second and third doses of anti-SARS-CoV-2 vaccine, stratified by immunosuppressive therapy, adjusting for prior infection, vaccine type, age, and interval between vaccination and blood collection. This study is registered with ISRCTN (No. 13495664). Findings: Both heterologous (first two doses adenovirus vaccine, third dose mRNA vaccine) and homologous (three doses mRNA vaccine) vaccination strategies significantly increased neutralising titres against both wild-type SARS-CoV-2 virus and the Omicron BA.4/5 variant in healthy participants and patients with IBD. Antibody titres against BA.4/5 were significantly lower than antibodies against wild-type virus in both healthy participants and patients with IBD (p < 0.0001). Multivariable models demonstrated that neutralising antibodies against BA.4/5 after three doses of vaccine were significantly lower in patients with IBD on infliximab (Geometric Mean Ratio (GMR) 0.19 [0.10, 0.36], p < 0.0001), infliximab and thiopurine combination (GMR 0.25 [0.13, 0.49], p < 0.0001) or tofacitinib (GMR 0.43 [0.20, 0.91], p = 0.028), but not in patients on thiopurine monotherapy, ustekinumab, or vedolizumab. Breakthrough infection was associated with lower neutralising antibodies against wild-type (p = 0.037) and BA.4/5 (p = 0.045). Interpretation: A third dose of a COVID-19 mRNA vaccine based on the wild-type spike glycoprotein significantly boosts neutralising antibody titres in patients with IBD. However, responses are lower against the Omicron variant BA.4/5, particularly in patients taking anti-TNF and JAK-inhibitor therapy. Breakthrough infections are associated with lower neutralising antibodies and immunosuppressed patients with IBD may receive additional benefit from bivalent vaccine boosters which target Omicron variants. Funding: Pfizer.


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