Background
The reactogenicity of BNT162b2 COVID-19 vaccine has been commonly reported and antipyretic medications are often used for mitigating adverse reactions. Possible associations between the reactogenicity events and specific antibody responses have not been fully investigated, nor has the influence of using antipyretics.
Methods
Serum samples were collected from hospital healthcare workers with no COVID-19 history and the SARS-CoV-2 spike-specific IgG titer after two doses was measured. Degree of solicited adverse reactions in a day, including the highest body temperature, were reported using a self-reporting diary for five days after each dose. The highest body temperature during the five days was divided into three grades (<37.0 °C, 37.0–37.9 °C, or ≥ 38.0 °C). Self-medicated antipyretics were reported using a questionnaire.
Results
The data of 335 participants were available for analysis. Multivariate analysis extracted the fever grade after the second dose (standardized coefficient beta = 0.301, p < 0.0001), female sex (beta = 0.196, p = 0.0014), and age (beta = -0.119, p = 0.0495) as being significantly correlated with the IgG titers. The positive correlation of the fever grade after the second dose with the IgG titers was also observed when analyzed by sex and age. The use of antipyretics did not interfere with the IgG titers irrespective of the fever grade.
Conclusions
The fever intensity after the second dose was associated with the IgG titer and antipyretic medications may be beneficial to mitigate the suffering from adverse reactions, without interfering with the acquisition of sufficient antibody responses.
A patient with primary cardiac lymphoma, which is very rare, generally is regarded to have a poor prognosis. We herein report a patient with cardiac lymphoma who was treated successfully by systemic chemotherapy and radiotherapy using a pacemaker to control the complete atrioventricular (A-V) block. A 70-year-old man had a syncope caused by a complete A-V block. An echocardiogram, a computed tomographic scan, and magnetic resonance imaging of his chest showed a cardiac tumor. At this time, a biopsy of the cardiac tumor disclosed malignant lymphoma (diffuse large cell type, B cell type). The patient was thus treated with systemic chemotherapy and radiotherapy and, as a result, achieved a complete remission with a disappearance of the A-V block. Recently, several successful outcomes involving primary cardiac lymphoma have been reported because of the progress in diagnostic techniques including echocardiography, computed tomographic scanning, and magnetic resonance imaging, as well as improvement in the therapy of malignant lymphoma. Our clinical experience indicated that an early and accurate diagnosis combined with the appropriate therapy can thus help in obtaining a long survival in patients with primary cardiac lymphoma.
Background
Infection control during COVID‐19 outbreaks in nursing facilities is a critical public health issue. Antibody responses before and after the third (booster) dose of SARS‐CoV‐2 vaccination in nursing home residents have not been fully characterized.
Methods
This study included 117 individuals: 54 nursing home residents (mean age, 83.8 years; 39 SARS‐CoV‐2‐naive and 15 previously infected) and 63 healthcare workers (mean age, 45.8 years; 32 SARS‐CoV‐2‐naive and 31 previously infected). Anti‐spike (receptor‐binding domain [RBD]) and anti‐nucleocapsid antibody responses to BNT162b2 mRNA vaccination and their related factors were evaluated using pre‐ (shortly and 6 months after the second dose) and post‐booster vaccination samples.
Results
The median anti‐spike (RBD) IgG level in SARS‐CoV‐2‐naive residents 6 months after the second dose was the lowest among the four groups, with a decreasing rate of over 90%. The median rate of increase before and after the third dose in SARS‐CoV‐2‐naive residents was significantly higher than that in SARS‐CoV‐2‐naive healthcare workers (64.1‐ vs. 37.0‐fold, P = 0.003), with the highest level among the groups. The IgG ratio of SARS‐CoV‐2‐naive residents to healthcare workers after the second and third doses changed from one‐fifth (20%) to one‐half (50%). The rate of increase after the third dose in previously infected individuals was three‐ to fourfold, regardless of residents or healthcare workers.
Conclusions
Advanced aged nursing home residents, poor responders in the initial SARS‐CoV‐2 vaccine series, could obtain sufficient antibody responses with the additional booster dose, despite more than 6 months after the second.
Summary. Acute promyelocytic leukaemia (APL) associated with a t(15:17) translocation generates a PML/KARa chimaeric gene which is transcribed as a fusion PML/RARα mRNA. To clarify the pathophysiologic role of PML/RARα in APL patients, we examined the expression of PML/RAKα in haemopoietic colonies in five patients with APIA by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR) analysis. By the two‐step RT‐PCR method, we demonstrated that PML/ RARα positive clones were present in progenitor cells including both CFU‐GM'and BFU‐E in two cases. This result suggests that the translocation of PML/RARα occurred in a pluripotent stem cell in some APL patients. In four patients we detected two amplified cDNA fragments of 780 and 640 bp which presumably arose by alternative splicing of the PML gene. Interestingly of CFU‐GM and BFU‐E colonies examined in four patients, there were three different types of colonies: those expressing only the 780 bp fragment, those expressing only the 640 bp fragment, and those expressing both fragments. This suggests that alternative splicing was clonally determined in each colony. We describe a useful RT‐PCR technique for the study of gene expression in a limited number of haemopoietic precursor cells.
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