Prospective SARS-CoV-2 additional vaccination in immunosuppressant-treated individuals with autoimmune diseases in a randomized controlled trial
Mackay, Meggan ; Wagner, Catriona A ; Pinckney, Ashley ; Cohen, Jeffrey A ; Wallace, Zachary S ; Khosroshahi, Arezou ; Sparks, Jeffrey A ; Lord, Sandra ; Saxena, Amit ; Caricchio, Roberto ... show 10 more
Authors
Wagner, Catriona A
Pinckney, Ashley
Cohen, Jeffrey A
Wallace, Zachary S
Khosroshahi, Arezou
Sparks, Jeffrey A
Lord, Sandra
Saxena, Amit
Caricchio, Roberto
Kim, Alfred Hj
Kamen, Diane L
Koumpouras, Fotios
Askanase, Anca D
Smith, Kenneth
Guthridge, Joel M
Pardo, Gabriel
Mao-Draayer, Yang
Macwana, Susan
McCarthy, Sean
Sherman, Matthew A
Daneshfar Hamrah, Sanaz
Veri, Maria
Walker, Sarah
York, Kate
Tedeschi, Sara K
Wang, Jennifer
Dziubla, Gabrielle E
Castro, Mike
Carroll, Robin
Narpala, Sandeep R
Lin, Bob C
Serebryannyy, Leonid
McDermott, Adrian B
Barry, William T
Goldmuntz, Ellen
McNamara, James
Payne, Aimee S
Bar-Or, Amit
Khanna, Dinesh
James, Judith A
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UMass Chan Affiliations
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Individuals with autoimmune diseases (AD) on immunosuppressants often have suboptimal responses to COVID-19 vaccine. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of additional COVID-19 vaccines in those treated with mycophenolate mofetil/mycophenolic acid (MMF/MPA), methotrexate (MTX), and B cell-depleting therapy (BCDT), including the impact of withholding MMF/MPA and MTX.
METHODS: In this open-label, multicenter, randomized trial, 22 participants taking MMF/MPA, 26 taking MTX, and 93 treated with BCDT who had suboptimal antibody responses to initial COVID-19 vaccines (2 doses of BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273 or 1 dose of AD26.COV2.S) received an additional homologous vaccine. Participants taking MMF/MPA and MTX were randomized (1:1) to continue or withhold treatment around vaccination. The primary outcome was the change in anti-Wuhan-Hu-1 receptor-binding domain (RBD) concentrations at 4 weeks post-additional vaccination. Secondary outcomes included adverse events, COVID-19 , and AD activity through 48 weeks.
RESULTS: Additional vaccination increased anti-RBD concentrations in participants taking MMF/MPA and MTX , irrespective of immunosuppressant withholding. BCDT-treated participants also demonstrated increased anti-RBD concentrations, albeit lower than MMF/MPA- and MTX-treated cohorts. COVID-19 occurred in 33% of participants; infections were predominantly mild and included only three non-fatal hospitalizations. Additional vaccination was well-tolerated, with low frequencies of severe disease flares and adverse events.
CONCLUSION: Additional COVID-19 vaccination is effective and safe in individuals with ADs treated with immunosuppressants, regardless of whether MMF/MPA or MTX is withheld.
CLINICALTRIALS: gov (NCT05000216; registered August 6, 2021: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05000216).
Source
Mackay M, Wagner CA, Pinckney A, Cohen JA, Wallace ZS, Khosroshahi A, Sparks JA, Lord S, Saxena A, Caricchio R, Kim AH, Kamen DL, Koumpouras F, Askanase AD, Smith K, Guthridge JM, Pardo G, Mao-Draayer Y, Macwana S, McCarthy S, Sherman MA, Daneshfar Hamrah S, Veri M, Walker S, York K, Tedeschi SK, Wang J, Dziubla GE, Castro M, Carroll R, Narpala SR, Lin BC, Serebryannyy L, McDermott AB, Barry WT, Goldmuntz E, McNamara J, Payne AS, Bar-Or A, Khanna D, James JA. Prospective SARS-CoV-2 additional vaccination in immunosuppressant-treated individuals with autoimmune diseases in a randomized controlled trial. JCI Insight. 2025 Nov 25:e191266. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.191266. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 41289027.