| Literature DB >> 36184587 |
Romain Fantin1,2, Rolando Herrero3, Allan Hildesheim3, Cristina Barboza-Solís4, Amada Aparicio5, D Rebecca Prevots6, Ruth M Pfeiffer7, Mitchell H Gail8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical trials and individual-level observational data in Israel demonstrated approximately 95% effectiveness of mRNA-based vaccines against symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection. Individual-level data are not available in many countries, particularly low- and middle- income countries. Using a novel Poisson regression model, we analyzed ecologic data in Costa Rica to estimate vaccine effectiveness and assess the usefulness of this approach.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Ecologic estimate of vaccine effectiveness; SARS-CoV-2; Vaccine effectiveness
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36184587 PMCID: PMC9526815 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-022-07740-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.667
Fig. 1Percentage of people vaccinated with 1 and with 2 doses by age group plotted against calendar time (January 1, 2021 to May 13, 2021). A person is defined as vaccinated with two doses on a given day if the second dose was received at least 14 days previously. A person is defined as vaccinated with one dose on a given day if the first vaccination was received at least 14 days previously and no second dose was given more than 14 days previously. Black, dark gray and light gray lines correspond respectively to 20–59, 60–74 and ≥ 75-year age groups. Solid lines are for one dose and dashed lines for two doses
Estimated population size, number of COVID-19 cases, number of cases who were hospitalized, and number of cases who died between December 1, 2020 and May 13, 2021, by age-group
| Age-class | Population (in thousands) | Cases (and percent of the population) | Hospitalizations (and percent of the cases) | Deaths (and percent of the cases) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20–24 | 416 | 13,747 (3.3%) | 177 (1.3%) | 9 (0.1%) |
| 25–29 | 437 | 16,928 (3.9%) | 271 (1.6%) | 11 (0.1%) |
| 30–34 | 452 | 17,928 (4.0%) | 400 (2.2%) | 25 (0.1%) |
| 35–39 | 427 | 16,164 (3.8%) | 495 (3.1%) | 36 (0.2%) |
| 40–44 | 356 | 13,679 (3.8%) | 545 (4.0%) | 64 (0.5%) |
| 45–49 | 284 | 11,022 (3.9%) | 612 (5.6%) | 87 (0.8%) |
| 50–54 | 274 | 10,255 (3.7%) | 785 (7.7%) | 113 (1.1%) |
| 55–59 | 267 | 9,191 (3.4%) | 1010 (11.0%) | 206 (2.2%) |
| 60–64 | 227 | 6,264 (2.8%) | 909 (14.5%) | 241 (3.8%) |
| 65–69 | 174 | 4,058 (2.3%) | 765 (18.9%) | 277 (6.8%) |
| 70–74 | 118 | 2,375 (2.0%) | 564 (23.7%) | 210 (8.8%) |
| 75–79 | 82 | 1,509 (1.8%) | 440 (29.2%) | 209 (13.9%) |
| 80–84 | 55 | 968 (1.8%) | 343 (35.4%) | 184 (19.0%) |
| 85 + | 52 | 943 (1.8%) | 400 (42.4%) | 257 (27.3%) |
| Total | 3621 | 125,031 (3.5%) | 7716 (6.2%) | 1929 (1.5%) |
Fig. 2Semi-logarithmic plot of COVID-19 incidence (A), hospitalizations (B), and deaths (C) per 105 people against calendar time (December 7, 2020 to May 13, 2021) by age group. Incidence, hospitalizations, and deaths were estimated from the preceding seven-day moving average. Black, dark grey and light grey lines correspond respectively to 20–59, 60–74 and ≥ 75-year age groups
Estimated effectiveness of one and two doses of vaccination (all or primarily tozinameran) to prevent diagnosed cases, hospitalized cases and deaths from the present ecologic study in Costa Rica and from other selected studies
| References | Location | Dates covered | Doses | Comments | Incident cases | Hospitalizations | Deaths |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current study | Costa Rica | 12/1/2020–5/13/2021 | 1 | Ecologic study design. Primarily Alpha (B1.1.7) variant | |||
| 2 | |||||||
| Haas et al. [ | Israel | 1/24/2021–4/3/2021 | 2 | Observational cohort study. Primarily Alpha variant | 97∙0% (96∙7 to 97∙2)b | 97∙2% (96.8 to 97.5) | 96∙7% (96.0 to 97.3) |
| Chung et al. [ | Ontario, Canada | 12/14/2020–4/19/2021 | 1 | Community-based test-negative case–control design. Alpha variant primarily | 59% (55 to 62)b | NA | 69% (59–77)f |
| 2 | 91% (88 to 93)b | NA | 96% (82–99)f | ||||
| Polack et al. [ | Multinational, primarily US | 7/27/2020–11/14/2020 | 2 | Randomised, double-blinded trial. Probably the Alpha variant | 94∙6% (89.9 to 97.3)b | NA | NA |
| Chemaitelly et al. [ | Qatar | 1/1/2021–9/5/2021 | 1 | Test-negative case–control design. Beta and Delta variants | 36∙8% (33.2 to 40.2)c | NA | NA |
| 2 | 77∙5% (76.4 to 78.6)c | NA | NA | ||||
| Tang et al. [ | Qatar | 3/23/2021–9/7/2021 | 1 | Test-negative case–control design against Delta variant | 45.3% (22.0 to 61.6)c | NA | 79∙7% (− 59.5 to 97.4)d |
| 2 | 51.9% (47.0 to 56.4)c | NA | 93∙4% (85.4 to 97.0)d | ||||
| Tenforde et al. [ | United States | 3/11/2021–8/15/2021 | 2 | Hospital-based case–control. Alpha and Delta variants | NA | 85% (82 to 87) | NAe |
NA not available
aSymptomatic or exposed to infected family member
bSymptomatic
cSymptomatic and non-symptomatic
dSevere, critical or fatal outcome
eData not presented separately for tozinameran
fDeath or hospitalization
Fig. 3Plots of predicted numbers of COVID-19 deaths against day of epidemic without vaccination (black solid line) and with vaccination (black dashed line) respectively for persons aged 20–59 (A), 60–74 (B), and 75 + (C) years. The area between these plots represents the estimated number of deaths prevented by vaccination. Also shown are the observed numbers of deaths (seven-day average, grey line), which agree well with the dashed line that accounts for vaccination