| Literature DB >> 34336771 |
Giuseppe Pontrelli1,2, Giulio Cimini3,4, Marco Roversi1,2, Andrea Gabrielli4,5, Gaetano Salina3,4, Stefania Bernardi1,2, Francesca Rocchi1,2, Alessandra Simonetti1,2, Carlo Giaquinto1,2,6, Paolo Rossi1,2, Francesco Sylos Labini4.
Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 is currently causing hundreds of deaths every day in European countries, mostly in not yet vaccinated elderly. Vaccine shortage poses relevant challenges to health authorities, called to act promptly with a scarcity of data. We modeled the mortality reduction of the elderly according to a schedule of mRNA SARS-CoV-2 vaccine that prioritized first dose administration. For the case study of Italy, we show an increase in protected individuals up to 53.4% and a decrease in deaths up to 19.8% in the cohort of over 80's compared with the standard vaccine recalls after 3 or 4 weeks. This model supports the adoption of vaccination campaigns that prioritize the administration of the first doses in the elderly.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; elderly; prioritizing 1st dose; vaccination
Year: 2021 PMID: 34336771 PMCID: PMC8318130 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.684760
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1Schematic illustration of standard and alternative schedule of vaccination.
Comparison between standard and alternative schedule.
| Doses per week | 400,000 (~9.0% of cohort) | ||
| Time between doses | 3–4 weeks | 11 weeks | |
| 1st dose effectiveness: 0.8 | Protected at 14/04 | 1,460,000 | 2,240,000 (+53.4%) |
| Deaths 24/2–14/4 | 9,750 | 8,854 (−9.2%) | |
| 1st dose effectiveness: 0.6 | Protected at 14/04 | 1,380,000 | 1,680,000 (+21.7%) |
| Deaths 24/2–14/4 | 10,094 | 9,750 (−3.4%) | |
| Doses per week | 600,000 (~13.5% of cohort) | ||
| Time between doses | 3–4 weeks | 7.5 weeks | |
| 1st dose effectiveness: 0.8 | Protected at 14/04 | 2,190,000 | 3,360,000 (+53.4%) |
| Deaths 24/2–14/4 | 8,406 | 7,062 (−16.0%) | |
| 1st dose effectiveness: 0.6 | Protected at 14/04 | 2,070,000 | 2,520,000 (+21.7%) |
| Deaths 24/2–14/4 | 8,923 | 8,406 (−5.8%) | |
| Doses per week | 800.000 (~18.0% of cohort) | ||
| Time between doses | 3–4 weeks | 5.5 weeks | |
| 1st dose effectiveness: 0.8 | Protected at 14/04 | 2,920,000 | 3,727,330 (+27.6%) |
| Deaths 24/2–14/4 | 7,061 | 5,664 (−19.8%) | |
| 1st dose effectiveness: 0.6 | Protected at 14/04 | 2,760,000 | 3,070,512 (+11.2%) |
| Deaths 24/2–14/4 | 7,751 | 7,213 (−6.9%) | |
Figure 2Graphical representation of the number of protected and dead individuals as a function of different variables, for a given vaccination schedule (alternative vs. standard). Each schedule is represented by two lines, one for vaccine effectiveness of 80% (blue for alternative schedule and orange for the standard schedule) and one for vaccine effectiveness of 60% (green for alternative schedule and red for the standard schedule). (A) Total protected individuals at week 9 and (B) Total deaths from week 3 to 9 as a function of the number of doses administered per week (or equally expressed as the percentage of the cohort vaccinated each week); (C) Efficiency index (= protected individuals per doses administered over time) of the alternative and standard schedule as a function of the elapsed weeks (dashed sublines indicated a higher number of doses administered, namely 800,000 per week); and (D) Death reduction with the alternative schedule (purple line for an 80% vaccine effectiveness and pink line for a 60% vaccine effectiveness) compared with the standard schedule, and effective week in which administration of second doses begins in the alternative schedule after the entire cohort has received the first dose of vaccine (black line). In all plots, the shaded region denotes the confidence interval derived from the uncertainty associated with the effectiveness of the first dose and mortality rate.