| Literature DB >> 35352979 |
Gary McLean1, Jeremy Kamil2, Benhur Lee3, Penny Moore4,5, Thomas F Schulz6,7,8, Alexander Muik9, Ugur Sahin9, Özlem Türeci9, Shanti Pather9.
Abstract
The emergence of several new variants of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in recent months has raised concerns around the potential impact on ongoing vaccination programs. Data from clinical trials and real-world evidence suggest that current vaccines remain highly effective against the alpha variant (B.1.1.7), while some vaccines have reduced efficacy and effectiveness against symptomatic disease caused by the beta variant (B.1.351) and the delta variant (B.1.617.2); however, effectiveness against severe disease and hospitalization caused by delta remains high. Although data on the effectiveness of the primary regimen against omicron (B.1.1.529) are limited, booster programs using mRNA vaccines have been shown to restore protection against infection and symptomatic disease (regardless of the vaccine used for the primary regimen) and maintain high effectiveness against hospitalization. However, effectiveness against infection and symptomatic disease wanes with time after the booster dose. Studies have demonstrated reductions of varying magnitude in neutralizing activity of vaccine-elicited antibodies against a range of SARS-CoV-2 variants, with the omicron variant in particular exhibiting partial immune escape. However, evidence suggests that T-cell responses are preserved across vaccine platforms, regardless of variant of concern. Nevertheless, various mitigation strategies are under investigation to address the potential for reduced efficacy or effectiveness against current and future SARS-CoV-2 variants, including modification of vaccines for certain variants (including omicron), multivalent vaccine formulations, and different delivery mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; mutation; vaccines; variant
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35352979 PMCID: PMC9040821 DOI: 10.1128/mbio.02979-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mBio Impact factor: 7.786
FIG 1(A) Location of spike protein mutations in SARS-CoV-2 variants alpha, beta, gamma, delta, lambda, mu, and omicron (1); (B) 3D structure of the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 variants alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and omicron in comparison with an ancestral virus created using PyMOL molecular graphic system version 2.3.2 (https://pymol.org). C, cleavage site (residues 681–685); CD, connector domain; CH, central helix; CT, cytoplasmic domain fusion; CTD, C-terminal domain; FP, fusion protein; HR, heptad repeat; SP, signal peptide; TM, transmembrane domain. †Disputed with mutation at same site. ‡Based on BA.1 lineage, which is part of the larger group of omicron/B.1.1.529 sequences. Exact position and number of mutations may differ according to source. Structure of spike glycoprotein in A based on Cai et al. (186). Mutations with known or proposed biological significance shown in red. Images in B are based on protein data bank (PDB) entry 6XR8 (https://www.rcsb.org/structure/6xr8). The structure contains D614 but has better solved sequence coverage than other entries although residue P681 is missing and not labeled where mutated in a VOC. Beta: R226I is missing and is not labeled. Gamma: T1072I (in seq is E1072). Omicron: N679K and N969K are missing and not labeled. Domain coloring of spike subunit as follows: NTD: green; RBD: blue; all others including entire subunits 2 and 3: cyan. Mutations are shown in color of function (red: known; black: unknown) and are shown in a single subunit for clarity.
Effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 variants (146, 148–150, 152, 159–163)
| Variant | Vaccine | Design and setting | Key outcomes | Vaccine effectiveness, % (95% CI) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alpha | BNT162b2 | Israel; ≥7 days post-dose 2, up to 80% isolates during study period were alpha | PCR-confirmed documented infection | 92 (88 to 95) |
|
| PCR-confirmed symptomatic COVID-19 | 94 (87 to 98) | ||||
| Hospitalization due to COVID-19 | 87 (55 to 100) | ||||
| Severe COVID-19 | 92 (75 to 100) | ||||
| Israel; ≥7 days post-dose 2, during alpha-dominant period; HCPs | PCR-confirmed infection | 94.5 (82.6 to 98.2) |
| ||
| PCR-confirmed symptomatic infection | 97.0 (72.0 to 99.7) | ||||
| England; ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed symptomatic COVID-19 caused by alpha | 93.7 (91.6 to 95.3) |
| ||
| Qatar, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | Any PCR-confirmed infection caused by alpha | 89.5 (85.9 to 92.3) |
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| Severe, critical, or fatal disease caused by alpha | 100 (81.7 to 100) | ||||
| Scotland, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed infection caused by alpha | 92 (90 to 93) |
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| Canada, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed symptomatic infection | 89 (87 to 91) |
| ||
| BNT162b2 and/or mRNA-1273 and/or ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 | Norway, ≥7 days post-dose 2 | PCR- or whole genome sequencing-confirmed infection by alpha or delta | 84.4 (81.8 to 86.5) |
| |
| mRNA-1273 | Canada, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed symptomatic infection | 91 (84 to 95) |
| |
| ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 | England, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed symptomatic COVID-19 caused by alpha | 74.5 (68.4 to 79.4) |
| |
| Scotland, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed infection caused by alpha | 73 (66 to 78) |
| ||
| Canada, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed symptomatic infection | 75 (−98 to 97) |
| ||
| Beta | BNT162b2 | Qatar, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | Any PCR-confirmed infection caused by beta | 75.0 (70.5 to 78.9) |
|
| Severe, critical, or fatal disease caused by beta | 100 (73.7 to 100) | ||||
| Delta | BNT162b2 | England, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed symptomatic COVID-19 caused by delta | 88.0 (85.3 to 90.1) |
|
| Scotland, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed infection caused by delta | 79 (75 to 82) |
| ||
| UK, ≥14 days post-dose 2, during delta-dominant period | PCR-confirmed infection | 80 (77 to 83) |
| ||
| Canada, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed symptomatic infection | 85 (59 to 94) |
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| US, ≥14 days post-dose 2, during delta-dominant period | PCR-confirmed COVID-19 associated hospitalization | 80 (73 to 85) |
| ||
| PCR-confirmed COVID-19-associated emergency department/urgent care encounters | 77 (74 to 80) | ||||
| US, ≥7 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed infection caused by delta | 75 (71 to 78) |
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| US, ≥7 days post-dose 2 | Hospitalization due to delta | 93 (84 to 96) | |||
| England, 2–≥25 wks post-dose 2 and 1–≥2 wks post-BNT162b2 booster | PCR-confirmed symptomatic disease caused by delta | wks post-dose 2: |
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| Denmark, 1–150 days post-dose 2 and 1–30 days post-booster | PCR-confirmed infection caused by delta | Days post-dose 2 |
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| England, ≥14 days post-dose 2 and ≥14 days post-mRNA vaccine booster | PCR-confirmed symptomatic infection caused by delta | Cohort analysis: |
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| BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273 | US, ≥14 days post-dose 2, during delta-dominant period | PCR-confirmed infection | 74 (65 to 82) |
| |
| mRNA-1273 | US, ≥14 days post-dose 2 and post-booster | PCR-confirmed infection caused by delta | Days post-dose 2: |
| |
| Hospitalization caused by delta | Post-dose 2: 98.0 (87.2 to 99.7) | ||||
| Denmark, 1–150 days post-dose 2 and 1–30 days post-booster | PCR-confirmed infection caused by delta | Days post-dose 2: |
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| ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 | England, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed symptomatic COVID-19 caused by delta | 67.0 (61.3 to 71.8) |
| |
| Scotland, ≥14 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed infection caused by delta | 60 (53 to 66) |
| ||
| UK, ≥14 days post-dose 2, during delta-dominant period | PCR-confirmed infection | 67 (62 to 71) |
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| England, 2–≥25 wks post-dose 2 and 1–≥2 wks post-ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 booster | PCR-confirmed symptomatic disease caused by delta | wks post-dose 2: |
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| England, ≥14 days post-dose 2 and ≥14 days post-ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 booster | PCR-confirmed symptomatic infection caused by delta | Cohort analysis: |
| ||
| BNT162b2 and/or mRNA-1273 and/or ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 | Norway, ≥7 days post-dose 2 | PCR- or whole-genome sequencing-confirmed infection by alpha or delta | 64.4 (60.6 to 68.2) |
| |
| Ad26.COV2.S | US, ≥14 days post-dose 1, during delta-dominant period | PCR-confirmed infection | 51 (−2 to 76) |
| |
| US, ≥14 days post-dose 1, during delta-dominant period | PCR-confirmed COVID-19-associated hospitalization | 60 (31 to 77) |
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| PCR-confirmed COVID-19-associated emergency department/urgent care encounters | 65 (56 to 72) | ||||
| US, ≥14 days post-dose 2, during delta-dominant period | PCR-confirmed COVID-19-associated hospitalization | 95 (92 to 97) | |||
| PCR-confirmed COVID-19-associated emergency department/urgent care encounters | 92 (89 to 93) | ||||
| England, 2–≥25 wks post-dose 2 and ≥2 wks post-BNT162b2 booster | PCR-confirmed symptomatic disease caused by omicron | wks post-dose 2: |
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| Omicron | BNT162b2 | Denmark, 1–150 days post-dose 2 and 1–30 days post-booster | PCR-confirmed infection caused by omicron | Days post-dose 2: |
|
| England, adults aged ≥65 yrs, post-booster | PCR-confirmed symptomatic disease caused by omicron | wks post-BNT162b2 booster: |
| ||
| mRNA-1273 | US, ≥14 days post-dose 2 and post-booster | PCR-confirmed infection caused by omicron | Days post-dose 2: |
| |
| Denmark, 1–150 days post-dose 2 | PCR-confirmed infection caused by omicron | Days post-dose 2: |
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| ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 | England, 2–≥25 wks post-dose 2 and 1–≥2 wks post-BNT162b2 booster | PCR-confirmed symptomatic disease caused by omicron | wks post-dose 2: |
| |
| England, adults aged ≥65 yrs, post- BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273 booster | PCR-confirmed symptomatic disease caused by omicron | wks post-booster: |
| ||
CI, confidence interval; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; HCP, health care professionals; SARS-CoV-2, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2.
Based on presence or absence of deletion in S gene at 69–70.
ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 was discontinued in Norway on 11 March, 2021, and those who received their first dose were offered a second dose of either BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273. In Norway, a mixed regimen of the two mRNA doses has been administered. The majority of patients in this study (81.3%) received BNT162b2 (187).
Specimens with S gene target failure were considered to be omicron, and specimens for which S gene was detected were assumed to be delta.
All specimens investigated for omicron by sequencing or variant-specific PCR; cases not identified as omicron assumed to be delta.