A prospective observational study for justification, safety, and efficacy of a third dose of mRNA vaccine in patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis. Kidney Int 101: [390][391][392][393][394][395][396][397][398][399][400][401][402] 2022
Background There is scarce evidence on fourth doses of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients. We have evaluated the humoral response and effectivity of the fourth dose in the CKD spectrum: non-dialysis CKD (ND-CKD), hemodialysis (HD), peritoneal dialysis (PD) and kidney transplant (KT) recipients. Methods This is a prespecified analysis of the prospective, observational, multicentric SENCOVAC study. In patients with CKD who had received a complete initial vaccination and one or two boosters and had anti-Spike antibody determinations 6 and 12 months after the initial vaccination, we analyzed factors associated to persistent negative humoral response and to higher anti-Spike antibody titers as well as the efficacy of vaccination on COVID-19 severity. Results Of 2186 patients (18% KT, 8% PD, 69% HD and 5% ND-CKD), 30% had received a fourth dose. The fourth dose increased anti-Spike antibody titers in HD (P = 0.001) and ND-CKD (P = 0.014) patients and seroconverted 72% of previously negative patients. Higher anti-Spike antibody titers at 12 months were independently associated to repeated exposure to antigen (fourth dose, previous breakthrough infections), previous anti-Spike antibody titers and not being a KT. Breakthrough COVID-19 was registered in 137 (6%) patients, of whom 5% required admission. Admitted patients had prior titers below 620 UI/ml and median values were lower (P = 0.020) than in non-admitted patients. Conclusions A fourth vaccine dose increased anti-Spike antibody titers or seroconverted many CKD patients, but those with the highest need for a vaccine booster (i.e. those with lower pre-booster antibody titers or KT recipients) derived the least benefit in terms of antibody titers. Admission for breakthrough COVID-19 was associated with low anti-Spike antibody titers.
Background Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is associated to high rates of cardiovascular events. We here explored whether the recently described triglycerides-glucose index (TyG) predicted the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in these patients. Methods Observational study of 1142 persons with CKD and free from diabetes and 460 controls from the prospective NEFRONA study. The study exposure was the TyG index at cohort inclusion. The study outcome was MACE (cardiovascular death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, nonfatal stroke and hospitalization for unstable angina). Covariates included demographics, comorbidities, lipid profile, renal function and glycemic control. Cox regression models evaluated the association between TyG index and 4-point MACE in Patients with CKD. Results TyG was higher (median 8.63 IQR [8.32-8.95] in patients with CKD compared to controls (p<0.001). TyG increased across albuminuria categories but was similar for glomerular filtration rate categories among patients with CKD stages 3-5. During 46±13 months of follow-up, 49 (4.3%) MACE were registered. TyG predicted the occurrence of MACE (HR 1.95, 95%CI [1.11-3.40] per TyG unit increase; and HR 2.29, 95%CI [1.24-4.20] for TyG values above the median of 8.63 units). Sensitivity analysis for subgroups of participants according to age, kidney function, body mass index and imaging evidence of atherosclerosis yielded similar results, as did adjusted analysis. Neither triglycerides nor glucose alone were associated with MACE. Conclusions The TyG index is associated with the occurrence of major cardiovascular events in persons free from diabetes with non-dialysis dependent CKD.
Introduction Patients on hemodialysis are at high-risk for complications derived from coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19). The present analysis evaluated the impact of a booster vaccine dose and breakthrough severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infections on humoral immunity three months after the booster dose. Methods This is a multicentric and prospective study assessing IgG anti-Spike antibodies 6 and 9 months after initial SARS-CoV-2 vaccination in patients on hemodialysis that had also received a booster dose before the 6-month assessment (early booster) or between the 6- and 9-month assessments (late booster). The impact of breakthrough infections, type of vaccine, time from the booster and clinical variables were assessed. Results A total of 711 patients (67% male, 67 [20-89] years) were included. Of which, 545 (77%) received an early booster and the rest a late booster. At 6 months, 64 (9%) patients had negative anti-Spike antibody titers (3% of early booster and 29% of late booster patients, p = 0.001). At 9 months, 91% of patients with 6-month negative response had seroconverted and there were no differences in residual prevalence of negative humoral response between early and late booster patients (0.9% vs 0.6%, p = 0.693). During follow-up, 35 patients (5%) developed breakthrough SARS-CoV-2 infection. Antibody titers at 9 months were independently associated to mRNA-1273 booster (p = 0.001), lower time from booster (p = 0.043) and past breakthrough SARS-CoV-2 infection (p<0.001). Conclusions In hemodialysis patients, higher titers of anti-Spike antibodies at 9 months were associated to mRNA-1273 booster, lower time from booster and past breakthrough SARS-CoV-2 infection.
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