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Covid-19: Study points out that booster with a different vaccine offers greater protection


06/10/2022

ISGlobal

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In people who received two doses of the inactivated Coronavac vaccine, an mRNA boost offers considerably better protection against mild and severe COVID-19 than a boost with the same vaccine, according to a large observational study performed in Brazil and co-led by Fiocruz and the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), an institution supported by “La Caixa” Foundation. These findings, published in Nature Communications, have important implications for guiding boosting strategies in countries where most of the population received inactivated virus vaccines.

Vaccination against COVID-19 has proved to be highly effective in protecting against severe disease and death. However, the effectiveness of primary vaccination (i.e. the two initial doses) was decreased upon the arrival of new variants of concern, particularly Omicron, justifying the administration of a booster dose.

Most studies on vaccine effectiveness have focused on mRNA and adenoviral vaccines, even though inactivated virus vaccines have been widely used particularly in low and middle-income countries – as of January 2022, they represent half of the doses administered worldwide.

To boost with the same vaccine or with a different one?

In this study, the researchers evaluated the effectiveness of boosting with an inactivated virus vaccine (CoronaVac) or with an mRNA vaccine (Pfizer) among Brazilian adults who initially received two doses of CoronaVac. The analysis, which included almost 1.4 million case-control pairs, was performed between December 2021 and April 2022, when Omicron BA.1 was predominant, and compared to a period when Delta was dominant.

“The strength of our observational study is the large sample size and geographical coverage, covering each one of the 5,570 Brazilian municipalities”, says Julio Croda, a researcher at Fiocruz and Yale School of Public Health, and senior co-author of the study.

Results show that primary vaccination with two doses of the CoronaVac vaccine provided almost no protection against symptomatic disease by Omicron, and 40-50% protection against severe disease. Boosting with Coronavac conferred no additional protection against symptomatic disease, and moderate additional protection against severe disease (74% and down to 40-50% for people aged over 75). Furthermore, this protection seemed to wane over the following four months. In contrast, an mRNA booster conferred higher protection against both symptomatic and severe disease (56.8% and 86%, respectively), and appeared to last for at least four months.

“Our findings have immediate implications for booster administration strategies in the context of the Omicron variant,” says Otavio Ranzani, ISGlobal researcher and first author of the study. They show that, in individuals who initially received inactivated vaccines, heterologous boosting (in this case, with an mRNA vaccine) offers a substantial increase in protection, even in the elderly.

About ISGlobal

The Barcelona Institute for Global Health, ISGlobal, is the fruit of an alliance between the ”la Caixa” Foundation and academic and government institutions to contribute to the efforts undertaken by the international community to address the challenges in global health.

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