the study found the seronegative rate — or percentage of patients with no detectable antibodies following vaccination — was a “surprisingly high” 25 per cent among the 1,445 participants evaluated between march 12 and may 5 of this year. patients included in the study ranged in age from 16 to 100 (with a median of 66), were 95.2 per cent white, 60.1 per cent female and had been diagnosed with lymphoma, leukemia or myeloma.
roughly 75 per cent of patients developed antibodies following vaccination. with regards to b cell malignancies, seronegativity was present in almost all non-hodgkin lymphoma subtypes studied, including among patients with mantle cell lymphoma (56%), marginal zone lymphoma (38%), chronic lymphocytic lymphoma (36%), waldenström’s macroglobulinemia (26%), follicular lymphoma (22%) and diffuse large b cell lymphoma (21%).
the story was different among the 64 hodgkin lymphoma patients, however, with all but one producing antibodies following inoculation. they also found encouragingly low rates of seronegativity in patients with acute lymphocytic leukemia (12%), acute myeloid leukemia (9%) and chronic myeloid leukemia (2.9%), as well as among those with multiple myeloma (5.3%) and smoldering multiple myeloma (0%).