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Citations to this article

Contralateral second dose improves antibody responses to a 2-dose mRNA vaccination regimen
Sedigheh Fazli, … , William B. Messer, Marcel E. Curlin
Sedigheh Fazli, … , William B. Messer, Marcel E. Curlin
Published January 16, 2024
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2024;134(6):e176411. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI176411.
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Clinical Research and Public Health Immunology Infectious disease Article has an altmetric score of 887

Contralateral second dose improves antibody responses to a 2-dose mRNA vaccination regimen

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Abstract

BACKGROUND Vaccination is typically administered without regard to site of prior vaccination, but this factor may substantially affect downstream immune responses.METHODS We assessed serological responses to initial COVID-19 vaccination in baseline seronegative adults who received second-dose boosters in the ipsilateral or contralateral arm relative to initial vaccination. We measured serum SARS-CoV-2 spike–specific Ig, receptor-binding domain–specific (RBD-specific) IgG, SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid–specific IgG, and neutralizing antibody titers against SARS-CoV-2.D614G (early strain) and SARS-CoV-2.B.1.1.529 (Omicron) at approximately 0.6, 8, and 14 months after boosting.RESULTS In 947 individuals, contralateral boosting was associated with higher spike-specific serum Ig, and this effect increased over time, from a 1.1-fold to a 1.4-fold increase by 14 months (P < 0.001). A similar pattern was seen for RBD-specific IgG. Among 54 pairs matched for age, sex, and relevant time intervals, arm groups had similar antibody levels at study visit 2 (W2), but contralateral boosting resulted in significantly higher binding and neutralizing antibody titers at W3 and W4, with progressive increase over time, ranging from 1.3-fold (total Ig, P = 0.007) to 4.0-fold (pseudovirus neutralization to B.1.1.529, P < 0.001).CONCLUSIONS In previously unexposed adults receiving an initial vaccine series with the BNT162b2 mRNA COVID-19 vaccine, contralateral boosting substantially increases antibody magnitude and breadth at times beyond 3 weeks after vaccination. This effect should be considered during arm selection in the context of multidose vaccine regimens.FUNDING M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust, OHSU Foundation, NIH.

Authors

Sedigheh Fazli, Archana Thomas, Abram E. Estrada, Hiro A.P. Ross, David Xthona Lee, Steven Kazmierczak, Mark K. Slifka, David Montefiori, William B. Messer, Marcel E. Curlin

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Total citations by year

Year: 2025 2024 Total
Citations: 3 3 6
Citation information
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Citations to this article (6)

Title and authors Publication Year
Pseudotyped Viruses: A Useful Platform for Pre-Clinical Studies Conducted in a BSL-2 Laboratory Setting
Rizatdinova SN, Ershova AE, Astrakhantseva IV
Biomolecules 2025
Impact of Extended Dosing Intervals and Ipsilateral Versus Contralateral Boosting on mRNA Vaccine Immunogenicity in Mice
Lu B, Chaudhary O, Banoth B, Nadkarni J, Zong W, Mausser E, Danz H, Motwani M, Ruiz S, Zhang D, Nageshwaran G, Rokbi B, Warren W, DeRosa F, Chivukula S
Vaccines 2025
COVID vaccine works faster with both doses in the same arm.
Fieldhouse R
Nature 2025
Contralateral versus ipsilateral vaccine boosting for COVID-19: considering the broader scientific landscape
Paul Goepfert
Journal of Clinical Investigation 2024
Ipsilateral and contralateral coadministration of influenza and COVID-19 vaccines produce similar antibody responses.
Pattinson D, Jester P, Gu C, Guan L, Armbrust T, Petrie JG, King JP, Nguyen HQ, Belongia EA, Halfmann P, Neumann G, Kawaoka Y
EBioMedicine 2024
Ipsilateral or contralateral boosting of mice with mRNA vaccines confers equivalent immunity and protection against a SARS-CoV-2 Omicron strain
Ying B, Liang CY, Desai P, Scheaffer SM, Elbashir SM, Edwards DK, Thackray LB, Diamond MS
Journal of Virology 2024

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Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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