The Zeeman Institute for Systems Biology & Infectious Disease Epidemiology Research, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK.
Joint UNIversities Pandemic and Epidemiological Research, .
Nat Commun. 2023 Feb 10;14(1):740. doi: 10.1038/s41467-023-35943-0.
In late 2020, the JCVI (the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation, which provides advice to the Department of Health and Social Care, England) made two important recommendations for the initial roll-out of the COVID-19 vaccine. The first was that vaccines should be targeted to older and vulnerable people, with the aim of maximally preventing disease rather than infection. The second was to increase the interval between first and second doses from 3 to 12 weeks. Here, we re-examine these recommendations through a mathematical model of SARS-CoV-2 infection in England. We show that targeting the most vulnerable had the biggest immediate impact (compared to targeting younger individuals who may be more responsible for transmission). The 12-week delay was also highly beneficial, estimated to have averted between 32-72 thousand hospital admissions and 4-9 thousand deaths over the first ten months of the campaign (December 2020-September 2021) depending on the assumed interaction between dose interval and efficacy.
2020 年末,联合疫苗接种和免疫委员会(JCVI,为英格兰卫生和社会保障部提供建议)对 COVID-19 疫苗的初步推广提出了两项重要建议。第一,疫苗应针对老年人和弱势群体,旨在最大程度地预防疾病而非感染。第二,将第一剂和第二剂之间的间隔从 3 周增加到 12 周。在这里,我们通过英格兰 SARS-CoV-2 感染的数学模型重新审视这些建议。我们发现,针对最脆弱人群的策略具有最大的即时影响(相比之下,针对可能更负责传播的年轻人的策略)。12 周的延迟也非常有益,据估计,在疫苗接种运动的头十个月(2020 年 12 月至 2021 年 9 月),可以避免 3.2-7.2 万次住院和 4000-9000 例死亡,具体取决于剂量间隔和疗效之间的假设相互作用。