Abstract

Background and aims Patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases (IMIDs) have an increased risk of COVID-19, primarily attributed to the use of immunosuppressive drugs such as glucocorticoids, which may attenuate the response to vaccines. This meta-analysis aims to assess the serologic response to COVID-19 vaccination in patients with IMIDs. Methods Electronic databases were searched on August 1, 2021 for observational studies. Data including reference population, medications, vaccination, and proportion of patients achieving a serologic response were extracted. Results Twenty-five observational studies (5360 patients) were included for analyses. A majority of the studies used mRNA vaccines (BNT162b2, mRNA-1273) with a small number of studies including other types of vaccines (AZD1222, Coronavac, BBV152, Ad26.COV2.S). Serologic response after a single (6 studies) and two doses (17 studies) of mRNA vaccine were 73.2% (95% confidence interval [CI] 65.7-79.5) and 83.4% (95%CI 76.8-88.4), respectively. On meta-regression, anti-CD20 therapy was associated with lower response rates (P <0.001) and anti-TNF therapy also showed a trend toward lower response rates (P = 0.058). Patients with IMIDs were less likely to achieve a serologic response compared to controls after two doses of mRNA vaccine (6 studies; odds ratio 0.086, 95% CI 0.036-0.206, P < .001). There were not enough studies to assess response to the adenoviral or inactivated vaccines. Conclusions Our meta-analysis demonstrated that patients with IMIDs have a reduced response to mRNA COVID-19 vaccines. These results suggest that IMID patients receiving mRNA vaccines should complete the vaccine series without delay and support the strategy of providing a 3rd dose of the vaccine.

  • Adults
  • Older adults
  • Healthcare workers
  • Risk factor
  • Vaccine/vaccination
  • COVID-19
  • Efficacy/effectiveness