| Literature DB >> 35214599 |
Tinevimbo Shiri1, Marc Evans2, Carla A Talarico3, Angharad R Morgan1, Maaz Mussad4, Philip O Buck3, Phil McEwan1, William David Strain5,6.
Abstract
The vaccination program is reducing the burden of COVID-19. However, recently, COVID-19 infections have been increasing across Europe, providing evidence that vaccine efficacy is waning. Consequently, booster doses are required to restore immunity levels. However, the relative risk-benefit ratio of boosters, compared to pursuing a primary course in the unvaccinated population, remains uncertain. In this study, a susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered (SEIR) transmission model of SARS-CoV-2 was used to investigate the impact of COVID-19 vaccine waning on disease burden, the benefit of a booster vaccine program compared to targeting the unvaccinated population, and the population-wide risk-benefit profile of vaccination. Our data demonstrates that the rate of vaccine efficacy waning has a significant impact on COVID-19 hospitalisations with the greatest effect in populations with lower vaccination coverage. There was greater benefit associated with a booster vaccination strategy compared to targeting the unvaccinated population, once >50% of the population had received their primary vaccination course. The population benefits of vaccination (reduced hospitalisations, long-COVID and deaths) outweighed the risks of myocarditis/pericarditis by an order of magnitude. Vaccination is important in ending the COVID-19 pandemic sooner, and the reduction in hospitalisations, death and long-COVID associated with vaccination significantly outweigh any risks. Despite these obvious benefits some people are vaccine reluctant, and as such remain unvaccinated. However, when most of a population have been vaccinated, a focus on a booster vaccine strategy for this group is likely to offer greater value, than targeting the proportion of the population who choose to remain unvaccinated.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; boosters; modelling; population risk
Year: 2022 PMID: 35214599 PMCID: PMC8880242 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10020140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Figure 1Model scheme for vaccinating framework.
Figure 2The impact of different theoretical waning rate on the expected number of daily COVID-19 hospitalisations at three months as a function of infection rates and vaccine coverage.
Figure 3The number of COVID-19 hospitalisations prevented per 100,000 primary series or booster vaccines (logarithmic scale).
Figure 4The impact of vaccine coverage and infection rates on the total number of adverse events (myocarditis/pericarditis), hospitalisations, long COVID and deaths after three months by age in vaccinated individuals in the population.