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AstraZeneca showed the pandemic isn’t over for immunocompromised patients. What’s next?

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For people with active immune systems, the phrase “post-COVID” comes as a relief — the inconveniences of infection, lockdown and masked encounters have largely slipped into the background. For the immunocompromised, the coronavirus is more than an inconvenience. It is a constant threat.

Although vaccines helped humanity dig itself out of the pandemic hole, immunocompromised people are often not well protected by the shots, according to a report from pharma giant AstraZeneca. Even when vaccinated multiple times, more than 10% of immunocompromised people — including cancer patients, organ transplant recipients and those taking immunosuppressive medicines — are unable to produce the antibodies needed to fight off infection.

To learn more about the burden of COVID-19 on immunocompromised patients, AstraZeneca ran two real-world studies to assess the volume of immunocompromised patients in the U.K. and U.S. through millions of health records and the risk faced by these patients as the pandemic began to transition to the endemic stage.

Dr. Paul Moss, deputy head of the College of Medical and Dental Sciences and Professor of Haematology at the University of Birmingham in the U.K., was an investigator in the U.K. study, titled Inform. For his work in immunology and COVID-19 research, Moss was awarded the Order of the British Empire in the 2022 Queen’s Birthday Honours.

“Inform was a study of electronic patient records in the U.K. that covered around 25% of the English population — nearly 12 million people,” Moss said. “That gave it tremendous statistical power, and identified that the population who were immunosuppressed was nearly 4%.” 

Although immunocompromised people made up about 4% of the population, they represented 22% of all COVID hospitalizations, 28% of ICU admissions due to COVID and 24% of all COVID deaths in 2022, Moss said.


“One of the lessons that will be learned from the last three years is how we optimize immune protection for patients and all aspects of clinical medicine.”

Dr. Paul Moss

Deputy head of the College of Medical and Dental Sciences and Professor of Haematology at the University of Birmingham


AstraZeneca developed Evusheld, a prophylactic injectable antibody, during the pandemic as a pre-exposure alternative to vaccines for people who are immunocompromised. And although these presented a viable option for these patients, Evusheld has shown less efficacy against newer strains of the virus, prompting regulatory agencies like the FDA to pull authorization

Other companies, such as Invivyd, are gunning to fill the void of monoclonal antibodies on the COVID market for immunocompromised patients. This summer, the company met with the FDA and nailed down a path to winning an emergency authorization for its clinical-stage mAb candidate

Here, Moss discusses the results of AstraZeneca’s massive data studies and why it’s so important for healthcare systems to stay vigilant in protecting vulnerable populations, even as this particular pandemic subsides.

This interview has been edited for brevity and style.

PHARMAVOICE: Why is it important to study the burden of the COVID pandemic on immunocompromised people?

DR. PAUL MOSS: In the early days of the pandemic,everybody was at risk. And so a whole general population needed to get protection that was delivered, thankfully, through vaccines. But as time moved on, we’ve started to recognize there are certain groups, particularly the very elderly and the immune suppressed, who are at higher risk of infection and serious complications from that infection. The Inform study provided a new way to look at this problem and define the absolute risk for individual patient groups.

What preventative treatments are currently available for the immunocompromised patients who aren’t protected by vaccines?

It’s an important question. It’s important to recognize the high-risk groups because we can inform them of their immune-suppressed status, and that will influence behavior — the identification of relative risk is important for how patients manage their life. And vaccination has to be optimized to give additional doses to many of these groups.

For those who are unable to respond appropriately to vaccination, we have to look at other methods — particularly in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, a prophylactic injectable monoclonal antibody provided strong protection.

Is there enough priority being placed on this type of work? Why has it taken three years to learn such an important lesson?

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