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A case series published in Annals of Internal Medicine finds that a fourth dose of an mRNA-based vaccine produces a satisfactory antibody response in some kidney transplant recipients who did not respond adequately after 3 previous doses. These findings support the use of a fourth vaccine dose for such patients.

Researchers from University Hospital of Strasbourg studied 92 recipients at 3 independent French university hospitals to investigate whether a fourth dose of an mRNA-based anti–SARS-CoV-2 vaccine would increase antispike IgG titers in kidney transplant recipients who showed a weak serologic response after 3 doses.

The patients, who had antispike IgG titers less than 143 BAU/mL 1 month after a third dose of vaccine were given a fourth dose of mRNA vaccine and then measurement of antispike IgG titers were taken 2 to 6 weeks later. The researchers found no safety concerns with the fourth dose and noted that after a median of 29 days, median antispike IgG levels increased significantly, suggesting that a fourth dose of may be warranted in these patients.

More information: Antibody Response to a Fourth Messenger RNA COVID-19 Vaccine Dose in Kidney Transplant Recipients: A Case Series, Annals of Internal Medicine (2022). DOI: 10.7326/L21-0598

Journal information: Annals of Internal Medicine