Abstract
CD19 targeted chimeric antigen receptor-modified T cell therapy (CAR-T) leads to B cell aplasia and low serum immunoglobulin levels. Long-lived CD19–negative plasma cells may persist through the therapy and generate antibodies. There is a paucity of data describing how CAR-T impacts the persistence of antibodies against vaccine-related antigens and the degree to which CAR-T recipients may respond to vaccines. We characterized the effect of CAR-T on pneumococcal immunoglobulin G (IgG) titers and determine whether pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV13) administered after CAR-T develops long-term humoral protection against pneumococcus. A retrospective chart review was performed to identify CAR-T recipients who had serum pneumococcal IgG titers drawn before (baseline) or at days +90, +180, +270, +360, or +540 after CAR-T. We then determined whether they received PCV13 vaccination at these timepoints. IgG concentration ≥1.3 μg/mL was considered protective for that serotype, and patients with ≥6/11 tested vaccine-specific serotypes meeting this threshold were deemed to have humoral protection against pneumococcus. Absolute pneumococcal IgG titers and the proportion of patients with humoral protection, stratified by serotype, and vaccination status were compared by paired nonparametric t-tests. Absolute counts for lymphocyte, CD4 T-cell, and CD19 cell and total IgG level, along with the rate of invasive pneumococcal infections, were measured at these timepoints. A total of 148 CAR-T recipients with pneumococcal IgG titers measured for at least one of the defined time points were identified. At baseline, 25% (19/76) patients with evaluable pneumococcal IgG titers met the definition of humoral protection. Among 44 patients with paired pneumococcal IgG titers at baseline and day+90, absolute IgG titers of all serotypes decreased (geometric mean = 0.41 and 0.32 µg/mL, respectively; P < .001). Thirteen patients were vaccinated following the titer blood draw at day+90 and had paired pneumococcal IgG titers at day+90 and day180. Absolute IgG titers of all vaccine specific serotypes in these vaccinated patients decreased from day+90 to day+180 (geometric mean = 0.36 and 0.29 µg/mL, respectively; P = .03). The proportion of patients meeting the criteria of humoral protection remained the same at day+180 despite vaccination at day+90. The results were similar among 8 patients vaccinated at day+180, as well as 7 patients consecutively vaccinated at day+90 and day+180 with corresponding pneumococcal IgG titers. When all vaccine-specific pneumococcal IgG titers were pooled together by timepoint regardless of vaccination status, the proportion of patients with humoral protection decreased until day+540. Some patients developed humoral protection after vaccination at day+360, maintained seroprotective IgG titers from baseline, or developed protection after receiving intravenous immunoglobulin treatment secondary to recurrent infections. Our study demonstrated that few large B cell lymphoma patients had humoral protection against pneumococcus at baseline, and existing IgG titers decreased after CAR-T. PCV13 vaccination at day+90 or day+180 after CAR-T did not increase humoral protection against pneumococcus. Only at day+540 was there evidence of humoral protection against pneumococcus in a modest proportion of patients. Clinical trials are needed to determine the optimal timing of vaccination, before or after CAR-T, to develop protective immunity against Streptococcus pneumoniae infections.
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