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Robust memory responses against influenza vaccination in pemphigus patients previously treated with rituximab
Alice Cho, Bridget Bradley, Robert Kauffman, Lalita Priyamvada, Yevgeniy Kovalenkov, Ron Feldman, Jens Wrammert
Alice Cho, Bridget Bradley, Robert Kauffman, Lalita Priyamvada, Yevgeniy Kovalenkov, Ron Feldman, Jens Wrammert
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Research Article Immunology Vaccines

Robust memory responses against influenza vaccination in pemphigus patients previously treated with rituximab

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Abstract

Rituximab is a therapeutic anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody widely used to treat B cell lymphoma and autoimmune diseases, such as rheumatic arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and autoimmune blistering skin diseases (AIBD). While rituximab fully depletes peripheral blood B cells, it remains unclear whether some preexisting B cell memory to pathogens or vaccines may survive depletion, especially in lymphoid tissues, and if these memory B cells can undergo homeostatic expansion during recovery from depletion. The limited data available on vaccine efficacy in this setting have been derived from rituximab-treated patients receiving concomitant chemotherapy or other potent immunosuppressants. Here, we present an in-depth analysis of seasonal influenza vaccine responses in AIBD patients previously treated with rituximab, who generally did not receive additional therapeutic interventions. We found that, despite a lack of influenza-specific memory B cells in the blood, patients mount robust recall responses to vaccination, comparable to healthy controls, both at a cellular and a serological level. Repertoire analyses of plasmablast responses suggest that they likely derive from a diverse pool of tissue-resident memory cells, refractory to depletion. Overall, these data have important implications for establishing an effective vaccine schedule for AIBD patients and the clinical care of rituximab-treated patients in general and contribute to our basic understanding of maintenance of normal and pathogenic human B cell memory.

Authors

Alice Cho, Bridget Bradley, Robert Kauffman, Lalita Priyamvada, Yevgeniy Kovalenkov, Ron Feldman, Jens Wrammert

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Figure 6

Vaccine-induced plasmablasts display comparable repertoire breadth in patients and healthy controls.

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Vaccine-induced plasmablasts display comparable repertoire breadth in pa...
Variable genes from plasmablasts induced by the seasonal influenza vaccine were amplified by single-cell PCR and analyzed for (A) number of somatic mutations, (B) CDR3 length, and (C) clonality (shared identical VH gene, JH gene, and CDR3 junction) of class-switched sequences. Each dot represents one individual donor, averaged from 22–46 sequences. (D) Frequency of isotypes in patients and healthy controls. A total of 172 sequences were analyzed from 5 healthy controls, and 286 sequences were analyzed from 8 patients. (E) Overall VH gene usage of class-switched sequences, reported as a frequency of total sequences analyzed from each cohort. (F) VH gene usage of antibodies in clonal groups reported as a frequency of total number of antibodies involved in clonal groups identified. Black circles represent data from the 2014/15 influenza season; red circles represent data from the 2015/16 influenza season.

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