Neutralizing antibody responses to SARS-CoV-2 variants in vaccinated Ontario long-term care home residents and workers

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.08.06.21261721

Language of the publication
English
Date
2021-08
Type
Submitted manuscript
Author(s)
  • Abe, Kento T.
  • Hu, Queenie
  • Mozafarihashjin, Mohammad
  • Samson, Reuben
  • Manguiat, Kathy
  • Robinson, Alyssia
  • Rathod, Bhavisha
  • Hardy, W. Rod
  • Wang, Jenny H.
  • Iskilova, Mariam
  • Pasculescu, Adrian
  • Fazel-Zarandi, Mahya
  • Li, Angel
  • Paterson, Aimee
  • Chao, Gary
  • Green, Karen
  • Gilbert, Lois
  • Barati, Shiva
  • Haq, Nazrana
  • Takaoka, Alyson
  • Takaoka, Julia Garnham
  • De Launay, Keelia Quinn
  • Fahim, Christine
  • Sheikh-Mohamed, Salma
  • Arita, Yuko
  • Durocher, Yves
  • Marcusson, Eric G.
  • Gommerman, Jennifer L.
  • Ostrowski, Mario
  • Colwill, Karen
  • Straus, Sharon E.
  • Wood, Heidi
  • McGeer, Allison J.
  • Gingras, Anne-Claude
Publisher
BMJ

Abstract

Prioritizing Ontario’s long-term care home (LTCH) residents for vaccination against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 has drastically reduced their disease burden; however, recent LTCH outbreaks of variants of concern (VOCs) have raised questions regarding their immune responses. In 198 residents, mRNA vaccine dose 1 elicited partial spike and receptor binding domain antibody responses, while the second elicited a response at least equivalent to convalescent individuals in most residents. Residents administered mRNA-1273 (Moderna) mounted stronger total and neutralizing antibodyresponses than those administered BNT162b2 (Pfizer-BioNTech). Two to four weeks after dose 2, residents (n = 119, median age 88) produced 4.8–6.3-fold fewer neutralizing antibodies than staff (n = 78; median age 47) against wild-type (with D614G) pseudotyped lentivirus, and residents administered BNT162b2 produced 3.89-fold fewer neutralizing antibodies than those who received mRNA-1273. These effects were exacerbated upon serum challenge with pseudotyped VOC spike, with up to 7.94-fold reductions in B.1.351 (Beta) neutralization. Cumulatively, weaker vaccine stimulation, age/comorbidities, and the VOC produced an ~130-fold reduction in apparent neutralization titers in LTCH residents and 37.9% of BNT162b2-vaccinated residents had undetectable neutralizing antibodies to B.1.351. Continued immune response surveillance and additional vaccine doses may be required in this population with known vulnerabilities.

Subject

  • Health

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Public health surveillance

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