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©The Author(s) 2023.
World J Clin Oncol. Sep 24, 2023; 14(9): 343-356
Published online Sep 24, 2023. doi: 10.5306/wjco.v14.i9.343
Published online Sep 24, 2023. doi: 10.5306/wjco.v14.i9.343
Ref. | Type of vaccine | Type of study | Subjects (diagnosis, other specific characteristics) | Data on efficacy | Data on safety (main side effects) |
OnCovid study group[5] | NA | A multicenter observational registry-based study | All PTs included n = 2634 (100%); PTs with advanced tumor stage n = 1244 (46%); PTs with receipt of anti-cancer therapy within 4 wk of COVID-19 diagnosis n = 1305 (51.8%); malignancy type: Breast n = 493 (18.9%); gastrointestinal n = 476 (18.2%); gynecologic/genitourinary n = 530 (20.3%); hematologic n = 357 (13.7%) | The difference in the necessity of hospitalization due to COVID-19, oxygen therapy requirement, mechanical ventilation requirement, and 14-d CFR between PTs stratified across time five phases and two major outbreaks of the pandemic; hospitalization requirement: 1st phase-64.7% to 5th phase-42.7% (P < 0.01); proportion to PTs requiring oxygen: therapy, phase 1-62.6%, to phase 5-46.0% (P < 0.001); mechanical ventilation: Phase 1-12.1% to phase 5-11.8% (P = 0.01); CFR: 1st outbreak-25.6% to-2nd outbreak 16.2% (P < 0.001) | N/A |
Khoury et al[63], 2021 | mRNA and adenoviral vector vaccines | 20.2% of subjects had (95%CI) 50% protective neutralization level | N/A | ||
Monin et al[66], 2021 | mRNA | Prospective observational study | PTs with oncologic disease n = 151: With solid cancer n = 95; with hematological malignancy n = 56; and HCs n = 54 | Surrogate marker of efficiency: Seroconversion after 1st dose: 32 of 34 (94%) HCs, 21 of 56 (38%), PTs with solid cancer, 8 of 44 (18%) PTs with hematologic malignancies; after 2nd dose: 12 of 12 (100%) HCs; 18 of 19 (95%) PTs with solid, 3 of 5 (60%) PTs with hematologic malignancies | AE: Injection site pain within 7 d following the first dose in: 23 of 65 (35%) PTs with cancer; 12 of 25 (48%) HCs; no vaccine-related deaths were reported |
Greenberger et al[69], 2021 | mRNA and adenoviral vector vaccines | Retrospective cohort study | PTs with hematologic malignancies, n = 3300 | ||
Ehmsen et al[71], 2021 | mRNA | Prospective cohort study (comparison between groups with different malignancies; no HCs) | PTs with cancer, n = 524, of whom: 201 (38%) with solid cancer; 323 (62%) with hematologic cancer; 524 (100%) had a blood sample drawn at a median of 36 d after the second dose of vaccine; and 247 (47%) had a second blood sample drawn 3 mo after the second dose of the vaccine | Seropositivity rate for anti-S IgG 36 d after vaccination: PTs with solid cancer 187 of 201 (93%); PTs with hematologic cancer 215 of 323 (66%); seropositivity rate for anti-S IgG 3 mo after vaccination: PTs with solid cancer-86%, PTs with hematologic cancer-53%; anti-S IgG titers; between 36-d and 3-mo samples declined from a median of 429 BAU/mL to a median of 139 BAU/mL (P = 0.03, Student’s t-test); T-cell reactivity: PTs with solid cancer-92 (46%), 70 (76%) mounted both CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses, 21 (23%) elicited only a CD8+ T-cell response, PTs with hematologic cancer-144 (45%), 81% were positive for both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, 26 (18%) only elicited a CD8+ T cell response, 76% of the seronegative PTs did not elicit a T-cell response; PTs with solid cancer: only 1 of the 14 (7%) seronegative PTs elicited a T-cell response; PTs with hematologic cancer: 28 of 108 (26%) PTs elicited a T-cell response | N/A |
Oosting et al[73], 2021 | mRNA | Prospective, multicenter, non-inferiority trial | Cohort A: Individuals without cancer (control cohort); cohort B: PTs with SOTs, regardless of stage and histology, treated with immunotherapy; cohort C: PTs treated with chemotherapy; and cohort D: PTs treated with chemoimmunotherapy | Presence of SARS-CoV-2-binding antibodies after the second vaccination; at 28th d, 6 mo after 12 mo after a spike-specific T-cell response was defined as a two times or more significant increase in the number of spot-forming cells | N/A |
Polack et al[84], 2020 | mRNA vaccines | Placebo-controlled, observer-blinded, pivotal efficacy trial (randomized 1:1 vaccine vs placebo) | All PTs included n = 43548; PTs with liver disease n = 217 (0.6%) | 95% efficacy (9 vaccinated vs 169 controls with COVID-19); 10 cases of severe COVID-19 infection vs 9 in the placebo group; flares: NR | Systemic AEs: (1) Fatigue (34%-51%); (2) headache (25%-39%); (3) fever (11%), injection site reactions; (4) pain (71%-83%); (5) redness and swelling (< 7%); and (6) serious AE < 4% |
Fendler et al[67], 2021 | BNT162b2 or AZD1222 vaccines (CAPTURE, NCT03226886) | Prospective cohort study | 585 PTs, the seroconversion rates after two doses of BNT162b2 or AZD1222 vaccines given over 12 wk were assessed | After two doses of BNT162b2 or AZD1222 vaccines given over 12 wk, seroconversion was 85% and 59% in PTs with solid and hematological malignancies, respectively; vaccine-induced T-cell responses were found in 80% of PTs regardless of the vaccine or type of cancer | N/A |
Goshen-Lago et al[75], 2021 | BNT162b2 vaccine | Prospective study | 154 PTs with SOTs and 135 HCs (health workers) | In PTs with cancer with active intravenous treatment, 79% (n = 122) of the PTs had positive serologic test results, compared with 84% (n = 114) in the control group; analysis by age, sex, or disease stage has no significant differences within the PT cohort; 15% of the seropositive PTs became seronegative after 6 mo, comparable to the control group | N/A |
Waldhorn et al[76], 2021 | BNT162b2 vaccine | Prospective study | 154 PTs with SOTs and 135 controls | 6 mo postvaccination, 79% of PTs and 84% of HCs were seropositive (P = 0.32); dramatically decreased serology titer | |
Shroff et al[78], 2021 | BNT162b2 | Phase 1 cohort trial | 53 PTs with SOTs on active cytotoxic anticancer therapy and 50 healthy cohort | Neutralizing antibodies were detected in 67% of PTs with cancer after the first immunization, followed by a threefold increase in median titers after the second dose | AEs were mild: temperature, fever, headache, redness, and swelling on the injection site |
Barrière et al[77], 2021 | BNT162b2 | VMO for vaccinated PTs under active treatment in the Department of Oncology of the Saint Jean Polyclinic, Nice, France | 194 evaluable PTs with SOTs and 31 HCs | 58 PTs had neutralizing antibodies, although the median levels were significantly lower than those in the control group; the data demonstrating impaired immunogenicity of the BNT162b2 vaccine in immunocompromised PTs; % of efficacy was not reported | N/A |
Thomas et al[81], 2022 | BNT162b2 mRNA | Phase 3 randomized clinical trial | 3813 participants had a history of neoplasm: Most common malignancies were breast (n = 460), prostate (n = 362), and melanoma (n = 223) | Vaccine efficacy was 94.4% (95%CI) after up to 6 mo of follow-up post-dose 2 | N/A |
Wagner et al[79], 2022 | mRNA-1273 or BNT162b2 | Prospective, open-label, phase four trail | 263 PTs with SOT, n = 63), MM, n = 70, IBD, n = 130 and 66 controls | 1 mo after the two-dose primary vaccination, the highest nonresponder rate was found in MM PTs (17%); 6 mo after the second dose, 18% of PTs with MM, 10% with SOT, and 4% with IBD became seronegative compared to the control group; the vaccination with mRNA-1273 led to higher antibody levels than with BNT162b2; booster vaccination increased antibody levels 8-fold in seropositive individuals and induced responses in those with undetectable pre-booster antibody levels | N/A |
Lee et al[82], 2022 | BNT162b2, ChAdOx1 nCov-19, or mixed and other | Population-based test-negative case-control study | Cancer cohort comprised 377194 individuals, of whom 42882 had breakthrough SARS-CoV-2 infections; the control population consisted of 28010955 individuals, of whom 5748708 had SARS-CoV-2 breakthrough infections | Overall vaccine effectiveness was 69.8% in the control population and 65.5% in the cancer cohort; vaccine effectiveness at 3-6 mo was lower in the cancer cohort (47.0%) than in the control population (61.4%) | N/A |
Reimann et al[80], 2022 | Ad26.COV2.S after BNT162b2 mRNA | 32 oncological nonresponders to double-dose BNT162b2 | The overall response rate was 31% | Mainly mild local and systemic reactions | |
Thakkar et al[83], 2023 | Two doses of mRNA or one dose of AD26.CoV2.S vaccine and administered a third dose of mRNA vaccine | Single-arm prospective clinical trial | cancer PTs | A third dose of the COVID-19 vaccine induces durable immunity in cancer PTs, leading to seroconversion in 57% of PTs who did not respond to primary vaccination; 18 PTs with blood cancer and severe immune suppression had no response after three doses; and the fourth dose boosted the immune response by 2/3 of PTs, with neutralizing activity against the omicron variant | N/A |
- Citation: Ivanov N, Krastev B, Miteva DG, Batselova H, Alexandrova R, Velikova T. Effectiveness and safety of COVID-19 vaccines in patients with oncological diseases: State-of-the-art. World J Clin Oncol 2023; 14(9): 343-356
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2218-4333/full/v14/i9/343.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5306/wjco.v14.i9.343