Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Humoral Response after SARS-CoV-2 Mrna Vaccines in Dialysis Patients: Integrating Anti-Sars-cov-2 Spike-Protein-RBD Antibody Monitoring to Manage Dialysis Centers in Pandemic Times

Thomas Bachelet, Jean-Philippe Bourdenx, Charlie Martinez, Simon Mucha, Philippe Martin-Dupont, Valerie Perier, Antoine Pommereau, Etsuro Ito

PloS one(2021)

Cited 16|Views1
No score
Abstract
Dialysis patients are both the most likely to benefit from vaccine protection against SARS-CoV-2 and at the highest risk of not developing an immune response. Data from the medical field are thus mandatory. We report our experience with a BNT162b2-mRNA vaccine in a retrospective analysis of 241 dialysis patients including 193 who underwent anti-Spike-Protein-Receptor-Binding-Domain (RBD) IgG analysis. We show that a pro-active vaccine campaign is effective in convincing most patients to be vaccinated (95%) and frequently elicits a specific antibody response (94.3% after two doses and 98.4% after three doses). Only immunocompromised Status is associated with lack of seroconversion (OR 7.6 [1.5-38.2], p = 0.02). We also identify factors associated with low response (last quartile; IgG<500AU/mL): immunocompromised status, age, absence of RAAS inhibitors, low lymphocytes count, high C Reactive Protein; and with high response (high quartile; IgG>7000AU/mL): age; previous SARS-CoV-2 infection and active Cancer. From this experience, we propose a strategy integrating anti-spike IgG monitoring to guide revaccination and dialysis center management in pandemic times.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined