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SARS‐CoV ‐2 antibody persistence in COVID ‐19 convalescent plasma donors: Dependency on assay format and applicability to serosurveillance
Author(s) -
Di Germanio Clara,
Simmons Graham,
Kelly Kathleen,
Martinelli Rachel,
Darst Orsolya,
Azimpouran Mahzad,
Stone Mars,
Hazegh Kelsey,
Grebe Eduard,
Zhang Shuting,
Ma Peijun,
Orzechowski Marek,
Gomez James E.,
Livny Jonathan,
Hung Deborah T.,
Vassallo Ralph,
Busch Michael P.,
Dumont Larry J.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
transfusion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.045
H-Index - 132
eISSN - 1537-2995
pISSN - 0041-1132
DOI - 10.1111/trf.16555
Subject(s) - antibody , neutralization , virology , antigen , immunology , medicine , covid-19 , persistence (discontinuity) , virus , biology , disease , infectious disease (medical specialty) , geotechnical engineering , engineering
Background Antibody response duration following severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection tends to be variable and depends on severity of disease and method of detection. Study design and methods COVID‐19 convalescent plasma from 18 donors was collected longitudinally for a maximum of 63–129 days following resolution of symptoms. All the samples were initially screened by the Ortho total Ig test to confirm positivity and subsequently tested with seven additional direct sandwich or indirect binding assays (Ortho, Roche, Abbott, Broad Institute) directed against a variety of antigen targets (S1, receptor binding domain, and nucleocapsid [NC]), along with two neutralization assays (Broad Institute live virus PRNT and Vitalant Research Institute [VRI] Pseudovirus reporter viral particle neutralization [RVPN]). Results The direct detection assays (Ortho total Ig total and Roche total Ig) showed increasing levels of antibodies over the time period, in contrast to the indirect IgG assays that showed a decline. Neutralization assays also demonstrated declining responses; the VRI RVPN pseudovirus had a greater rate of decline than the Broad PRNT live virus assay. Discussion These data show that in addition to variable individual responses and associations with disease severity, the detection assay chosen contributes to the heterogeneous results in antibody stability over time. Depending on the scope of the research, one assay may be preferable over another. For serosurveillance studies, direct, double Ag‐sandwich assays appear to be the best choice due to their stability; in particular, algorithms that include both S1‐ and NC‐based assays can help reduce the rate of false‐positivity and discriminate between natural infection and vaccine‐derived seroreactivity.