Durable T cell immunity to COVID-19 vaccines in MS patients on B cell depletion therapy. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Immune-mediated protection generated to COVID-19 mRNA vaccines is associated with anti-Spike (S) protein neutralizing antibodies. However, humoral immunity is compromised in B cell depleting (BCD) therapies, used to treat autoimmune diseases such as Multiple Sclerosis (MS). To study the effect of BCD on the durability and protective efficacy of vaccine-induced immunity, we evaluated S-reactive antibodies and T cell responses 1-70 weeks post-vaccination in MS cohorts treated with BCD compared to non-BCD therapies from four centers. BCD-treated participants had significantly reduced antibody levels and enhanced frequencies of S-reactive CD4+ and CD8+ memory T cells to COVID-19 vaccination compared to the non-BCD group, with some variations among different BCD formulations. T cell memory responses persisted up to 14 months post-vaccination in both BCD and non-BCD cohorts, who experienced similar clinical protection from COVID-19. Together, our results establish a critical role for T cell-mediated immunity in anti-viral protection independent of humoral immunity.

authors

  • Davis-Porada, Julia
  • Tozlu, Ceren
  • Aiello, Claudia
  • Apostolidis, Sokratis A
  • Bar-Or, Amit
  • Bove, Riley
  • Espinoza, Diego A
  • Ferreira Brito, Sugeidy
  • Jacobs, Dina
  • Kakara, Mihir
  • Onomichi, Kaho
  • Ricci, Adelle
  • Sabatino, Joseph J
  • Walker, Elizabeth
  • Wherry, E John
  • Zhang, Lili
  • Zhu, Wen
  • Xia, Zongqi
  • De Jager, Philip
  • Wesley, Sarah Flanagan
  • Straus Farber, Rebecca
  • Farber, Donna L

publication date

  • May 17, 2025

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC12085558

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/s41541-025-01151-8

PubMed ID

  • 40382362

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 10

issue

  • 1