| Literature DB >> 35418201 |
Ofra Amir1, Yair Goldberg2, Amit Huppert3,4, Ron Milo5, Micha Mandel6, Yinon M Bar-On5, Omri Bodenheimer7, Nachman Ash7, Sharon Alroy-Preis7.
Abstract
Israel began administering a BNT162b2 booster dose to restore protection following the waning of the 2-dose vaccine. Biological studies have shown that a "fresh" booster dose leads to increased antibody levels compared to a fresh 2-dose vaccine, which may suggest increased effectiveness. To compare the real-world effectiveness of a fresh (up to 60 days) booster dose with that of a fresh 2-dose vaccine, we took advantage of a quasi-experimental study that compares populations that were eligible to receive the vaccine at different times due to age-dependent policies. Specifically, we compared the confirmed infection rates in adolescents aged 12-14 (215,653 individuals) who received the 2-dose vaccine and in adolescents aged 16-18 (103,454 individuals) who received the booster dose. Our analysis shows that the confirmed infection rate was lower by a factor of 3.7 (95% CI: 2.7 to 5.2) in the booster group.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35418201 PMCID: PMC9008037 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-29578-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Estimated covariate-adjusted rates of confirmed infections per 100,000 at-risk days.
Estimates were obtained from Poisson regression analysis for the study period from September 12, 2021 to October 9, 2021, stratified by cohorts, with n = 4,361,550 days at risk. The top plot shows the results of the main analysis of the two study cohorts. The bottom plot shows covariate-adjusted rates of confirmed infections for each age group. Errors bars show 95% confidence intervals (not adjusted for multiplicity).
Demographic and clinical characteristics of the study groups.
| Group | Unvaccinated 12–14 | Unvaccinated 16–18 | Vaccinated 12–14 | Vaccinated 16–18 | Booster 16–18 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % person days at risk | # infections | % person days at risk | # infections | % person days at risk | # infections | % person days at risk | # infections | % person days at risk | # infections | |
| Female | 51.90% | 2,805 | 53.30% | 1,038 | 51.90% | 245 | 47.40% | 7 | 49.30% | 21 |
| Male | 48.10% | 2,629 | 46.70% | 698 | 48.10% | 146 | 52.60% | 9 | 50.70% | 19 |
| General Jewish | 60.50% | 2,622 | 59.90% | 930 | 76.60% | 260 | 53.30% | 11 | 88.20% | 29 |
| Arab | 15.30% | 635 | 23.00% | 303 | 7.60% | 33 | 8.90% | 0 | 5.40% | 4 |
| Ultra-Orthodox | 24.10% | 2,177 | 17.20% | 503 | 15.70% | 98 | 37.80% | 5 | 6.40% | 7 |
The booster group comprises individuals of ages 16–18, 14 or more days after they received the booster dose. The doubly-vaccinated groups comprise of individuals 14–60 days after they received the second dose, in ages 12–14 or 16–18. The unvaccinated groups (reference groups in the secondary analysis) comprise of individuals in ages 12–14 or 16–18 who were not vaccinated. Only person-days and events that were used in the main and secondary analyses are presented. The table presents the proportion of person-days at risk instead of the proportion of individuals. Values are presented for the study period— September 12, 2021 to October 9, 2021.