This is an interesting finding. I think at the back of our minds, you know, our patients with sickle cell disease post-transplant, they tend to have high IgG levels. And in everybody’s mind, they’re like, wow, they’ve recovered fast. They’re going to do fine. And then we did this study for us to find out that about 40% of those patients, when we tested their pneumococcal vaccine response, we found that it was lacking...
This is an interesting finding. I think at the back of our minds, you know, our patients with sickle cell disease post-transplant, they tend to have high IgG levels. And in everybody’s mind, they’re like, wow, they’ve recovered fast. They’re going to do fine. And then we did this study for us to find out that about 40% of those patients, when we tested their pneumococcal vaccine response, we found that it was lacking. And this is in spite of the fact that they had very good IgG levels leading up to when they got the vaccine. And so it makes us think that these patients are still leaky. Our patients with sickle cell disease, they have this background inflammatory reaction, and they’re still leaky. They still have produced a lot of this, what I would call, useless immunoglobulins that kind of falsifies the picture that they’re alright. And so I think the take-home message there is that our patients with sickle cell disease, post-transplant, you should watch them closely. We should ensure that they get their revaccination and ensure that they are actually having a good response to the vaccinations.
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