Infectious Disease Service, Department of Paediatrics, and SingHealth Duke-NUS Paediatrics Academic Clinical Program, KK Women's and Children's Hospital, Singapore; Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore; Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine, Nanyang Technology University, Singapore.
Ministry of Health, Singapore.
Lancet Child Adolesc Health. 2023 Jul;7(7):463-470. doi: 10.1016/S2352-4642(23)00101-3. Epub 2023 May 15.
Information on variant-specific vaccine protection and the effect of previous infection variant is scarce in children. We aimed to ascertain the level of protection conferred by BNT162b2 COVID-19 vaccination against omicron variant infection (BA.4 or BA.5, and XBB) in a previously infected national paediatric cohort. We also explored the association between sequence of previous infection (variant) and vaccination on protection.
We did a retrospective, population-based cohort study using the national databases of all confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections, vaccines administered, and demographic records maintained by the Ministry of Health, Singapore. The study cohort consisted of children aged 5-11 years and adolescents aged 12-17 years who had a previous SARS-CoV-2 infection from Jan 1, 2020, to Dec 15, 2022. People who were infected during the pre-delta period or were immunocompromised (received three vaccination doses [children 5-11 years old] and four vaccinations doses [adolescents 12-17 years old]) were excluded. Those who had multiple episodes of infection before the study start date, were not vaccinated before infection but completed three doses, received bivalent mRNA vaccine, or received non-mRNA vaccine doses were also excluded. All SARS-CoV-2 infections confirmed by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction or rapid antigen testing were grouped into delta, BA.1, BA.2, BA.4 or BA.5, or XBB variants using a combination of whole-genome sequencing, S-gene target failure results, and imputation. For BA.4 or BA.5, the study outcome period was June 1-Sept 30, 2022, and for XBB variants the outcome period was Oct 18-Dec 15, 2022. Incidence rate ratios between vaccinated and unvaccinated were derived using adjusted Poisson regressions and vaccine effectiveness was estimated as (1-risk ratio) × 100%.
135 197 people aged 5-17 years (79 332 children and 55 865 adolescents) were included in the cohort for the vaccine effectiveness analysis against omicron BA.4 or BA.5, and 164 704 people aged 5-17 years (97 235 children and 67 469 adolescents) were included for the analysis against omicron XBB. Approximately 47% of participants were female and 53% were male. Among those previously infected, vaccine effectiveness against BA.4 or BA.5 infection in fully vaccinated children (two doses) was 74·0% (95% CI 67·7-79·1) and in adolescents (three doses) was 85·7% (80·2-89·6). Against XBB, protection conferred with full vaccination was lower at 62·8% (95% CI 42·3-76·0) in children and 47·9% (20·2-66·1) in adolescents. In children, receipt of two-dose vaccination before first SARS-CoV-2 infection provided them with the highest protection against subsequent BA.4 or BA.5 infection at 85·3% (95% CI 80·2-89·1); however, this was not shown to be the case for adolescents. First infection variant had an effect on vaccine effectiveness against omicron BA.4 or BA.5 reinfection in the following descending order: BA.2 conferred the highest protection (92·3% [95% CI 88·9-94·7] in children and 96·4% [93·5-98·0] in adolescents) followed by BA.1 (81·9% [75·9-86·4] in children and 95·0% [91·6-97·0] in adolescents), and delta which conferred the lowest protection (51·9% [5·3-75·6] in children and 77·5% [63·9-86·0] in adolescents).
In previously infected children and adolescents, BNT162b2 vaccination provided additional protection against omicron BA.4 or BA.5 and XBB variants compared with those who remained unvaccinated. Hybrid immunity against XBB was lower than against BA.4 or BA.5, especially in adolescents. Early vaccination of previously uninfected children before their first SARS-CoV-2 exposure could potentially strengthen population immunity resilience against future variants.
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关于变异株特异性疫苗保护作用和先前感染变异株的影响的信息在儿童中较为匮乏。我们旨在确定先前感染过的儿童队列中,BNT162b2 COVID-19 疫苗对奥密克戎变异株感染(BA.4 或 BA.5 和 XBB)的保护水平。我们还探讨了先前感染(变异)序列与疫苗接种对保护作用的关联。
我们进行了一项回顾性、基于人群的队列研究,使用了新加坡卫生部维护的所有 SARS-CoV-2 感染确诊病例、疫苗接种和人口统计记录的国家数据库。研究队列包括 5-11 岁的儿童和 12-17 岁的青少年,他们在 2020 年 1 月 1 日至 2022 年 12 月 15 日期间曾感染过 SARS-CoV-2。排除了在德尔塔流行期间感染或免疫功能低下(5-11 岁儿童接种三剂疫苗,12-17 岁青少年接种四剂疫苗)的人。也排除了那些在研究开始前有多次感染史、在感染前未接种疫苗但完成了三剂、接种了二价 mRNA 疫苗或接种了非 mRNA 疫苗的人。所有通过逆转录酶聚合酶链反应或快速抗原检测确诊的 SARS-CoV-2 感染均通过全基因组测序、S 基因靶标失败结果和推断,分为德尔塔、BA.1、BA.2、BA.4 或 BA.5 或 XBB 变异株。对于 BA.4 或 BA.5,研究结果期为 2022 年 6 月 1 日至 9 月 30 日,对于 XBB 变体,结果期为 2022 年 10 月 18 日至 12 月 15 日。使用调整后的泊松回归得出接种疫苗和未接种疫苗者之间的发病率比值,并估计疫苗有效性为(1-风险比)×100%。
纳入了 135197 名 5-17 岁的人(79332 名儿童和 55865 名青少年)进行针对奥密克戎 BA.4 或 BA.5 的疫苗有效性分析,纳入了 164704 名 5-17 岁的人(97235 名儿童和 67469 名青少年)进行针对奥密克戎 XBB 的分析。参与者中约 47%为女性,53%为男性。在那些先前感染过的人中,完全接种疫苗(两剂)的儿童对 BA.4 或 BA.5 感染的疫苗有效性为 74.0%(95%CI 67.7-79.1),青少年为 85.7%(80.2-89.6)。对于 XBB,完全接种疫苗的保护作用较低,为 62.8%(95%CI 42.3-76.0)在儿童中,47.9%(20.2-66.1)在青少年中。在儿童中,在首次 SARS-CoV-2 感染前接种两剂疫苗可使他们对随后的 BA.4 或 BA.5 感染获得最高保护,有效性为 85.3%(95%CI 80.2-89.1);然而,在青少年中并未显示出这种情况。先前感染的变异株对奥密克戎 BA.4 或 BA.5 再感染的疫苗有效性有影响,按以下降序排列:BA.2 提供的保护最高(儿童 92.3%[95%CI 88.9-94.7],青少年 96.4%[93.5-98.0]),其次是 BA.1(儿童 81.9%[75.9-86.4],青少年 95.0%[91.6-97.0]),德尔塔提供的保护最低(儿童 51.9%[5.3-75.6],青少年 77.5%[63.9-86.0])。
在先前感染过的儿童和青少年中,与未接种疫苗者相比,BNT162b2 疫苗接种对奥密克戎 BA.4 或 BA.5 和 XBB 变异株提供了额外的保护。针对 XBB 的混合免疫力低于针对 BA.4 或 BA.5 的免疫力,尤其是在青少年中。在儿童首次接触 SARS-CoV-2 之前对未感染者进行早期疫苗接种,可能会增强人群对未来变异株的免疫力。
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