| Literature DB >> 35013591 |
Venice Servellita1,2, Mary Kate Morris3, Alicia Sotomayor-Gonzalez1,2, Amelia S Gliwa1,2, Erika Torres4, Noah Brazer1,2, Alicia Zhou4, Katherine T Hernandez5, Madeline Sankaran5, Baolin Wang1,2, Daniel Wong1,2, Candace Wang1,2, Yueyuan Zhang1,2, Kevin R Reyes1,2, Dustin Glasner1,2, Xianding Deng1,2, Jessica Streithorst1,2, Steve Miller1,2, Edwin Frias6, Mary Rodgers6, Gavin Cloherty6, John Hackett6, Carl Hanson3, Debra Wadford3, Susan Philip5, Scott Topper4, Darpun Sachdev5, Charles Y Chiu7,8,9,10.
Abstract
Associations between vaccine breakthrough cases and infection by different SARS coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants have remained largely unexplored. Here we analysed SARS-CoV-2 whole-genome sequences and viral loads from 1,373 persons with COVID-19 from the San Francisco Bay Area from 1 February to 30 June 2021, of which 125 (9.1%) were vaccine breakthrough infections. Vaccine breakthrough infections were more commonly associated with circulating antibody-resistant variants carrying ≥1 mutation associated with decreased antibody neutralization (L452R/Q, E484K/Q and/or F490S) than infections in unvaccinated individuals (78% versus 48%, P = 1.96 × 10-8). Differences in viral loads were non-significant between unvaccinated and fully vaccinated cases overall (P = 0.99) and according to lineage (P = 0.09-0.78). Symptomatic vaccine breakthrough infections had comparable viral loads (P = 0.64), whereas asymptomatic breakthrough infections had decreased viral loads (P = 0.023) compared with infections in unvaccinated individuals. In 5 cases with serial samples available for serologic analyses, vaccine breakthrough infections were found to be associated with low or undetectable neutralizing antibody levels attributable to an immunocompromised state or infection by an antibody-resistant lineage. Taken together, our results show that vaccine breakthrough infections are overrepresented by antibody-resistant SARS-CoV-2 variants, and that symptomatic breakthrough infections may be as efficient in spreading COVID-19 as unvaccinated infections, regardless of the infecting lineage.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35013591 DOI: 10.1038/s41564-021-01041-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Microbiol ISSN: 2058-5276 Impact factor: 17.745