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. 2022 Sep 9:jiac366. doi: 10.1093/infdis/jiac366

Longitudinal Evaluation of Antibody Persistence in Mother-Infant Dyads Following SARS-CoV-2 Infection in Pregnancy

Mary C Cambou 1,✉,#, Christine M Liu 2,#, Thalia Mok 3, Viviana Fajardo-Martinez 4, Sophia G Paiola 5, Francisco J Ibarrondo 6, Tara Kerin 7, Trevon Fuller 8,9, Nicole H Tobin 10, Gustavo Garcia 11, Debika Bhattacharya 12, Grace M Aldrovandi 13, Vaithilingaraja Arumugaswami 14, Suan Sin Foo 15, Jae U Jung 16, Zilton Vasconcelos 17, Patricia Brasil 18, Michelle Brendolin 19, Otto Yang 20, Rashmi Rao 21, Karin Nielsen-Saines 22
PMCID: PMC9494415  PMID: 36082433

Abstract

Background

There are limited data on how COVID-19 severity, timing of infection, and subsequent vaccination impact transplacental transfer and persistence of maternal and infant antibodies.

Methods

In a longitudinal cohort of pregnant women with PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, maternal/infant sera were collected at enrollment, delivery/birth, and 6 months. Anti-SARS-CoV-2 spike IgG, IgM and IgA were measured by ELISA.

Results

256 pregnant women and 135 infants were enrolled; 148 maternal and 122 neonatal specimens were collected at delivery/birth; 45 maternal and 48 infant specimens were collected at 6 months. Sixty-eight percent of women produced all anti-SARS-CoV-2 isotypes at delivery (IgG, IgM, IgA); 96% had at least one isotype. Symptomatic disease, and vaccination prior to delivery, were associated with higher maternal IgG at L&D. Detectable IgG in infants dropped from 78% at birth to 52% at 6 months. In the multivariate analysis evaluating factors associated with detectable IgG in infants at delivery, significant predictors were 3rd trimester infection (OR 4.0), mild/moderate disease (OR 4.8), severe/critical disease (OR 6.3), and maternal vaccination prior to delivery (OR 18.8). No factors were significant in the multivariate analysis at 6 months postpartum.

Conclusions

Vaccination in pregnancy post-COVID-19 recovery is a strategy for boosting antibodies in mother-infant dyads.

Keywords: COVID-19 in pregnancy, SARS-CoV-2 in pregnancy, transplacental transfer


Articles from The Journal of Infectious Diseases are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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