Pagel Christina, Wilde Harrison, Tomlinson Christopher, Mateen Bilal, Brown Katherine
Clinical Operational Research Unit, Department of Mathematics, University College London (UCL), London WC1E 6BT, UK.
Department of Statistics, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK.
Vaccines (Basel). 2023 May 16;11(5):988. doi: 10.3390/vaccines11050988.
Vaccination rates against SARS-CoV-2 in children aged five to eleven years remain low in many countries. The current benefit of vaccination in this age group has been questioned given that the large majority of children have now experienced at least one SARS-CoV-2 infection. However, protection from infection, vaccination or both wanes over time. National decisions on offering vaccines to this age group have tended to be made without considering time since infection. There is an urgent need to evaluate the additional benefits of vaccination in previously infected children and under what circumstances those benefits accrue. We present a novel methodological framework for estimating the potential benefits of COVID-19 vaccination in previously infected children aged five to eleven, accounting for waning. We apply this framework to the UK context and for two adverse outcomes: hospitalisation related to SARS-CoV-2 infection and Long Covid. We show that the most important drivers of benefit are: the degree of protection provided by previous infection; the protection provided by vaccination; the time since previous infection; and future attack rates. Vaccination can be very beneficial for previously infected children if future attack rates are high and several months have elapsed since the previous major wave in this group. Benefits are generally larger for Long Covid than hospitalisation, because Long Covid is both more common than hospitalisation and previous infection offers less protection against it. Our framework provides a structure for policy makers to explore the additional benefit of vaccination across a range of adverse outcomes and different parameter assumptions. It can be easily updated as new evidence emerges.
在许多国家,5至11岁儿童的新冠病毒疫苗接种率仍然很低。鉴于现在绝大多数儿童至少经历过一次新冠病毒感染,这一年龄组疫苗接种的当前益处受到了质疑。然而,感染、接种疫苗或两者提供的保护都会随着时间减弱。各国在决定是否为这一年龄组提供疫苗时,往往没有考虑感染后的时间。迫切需要评估既往感染儿童接种疫苗的额外益处,以及这些益处产生的情况。我们提出了一个新的方法框架,用于估计5至11岁既往感染儿童接种新冠疫苗的潜在益处,并考虑到保护作用的减弱。我们将这个框架应用于英国的情况以及两种不良后果:与新冠病毒感染相关的住院治疗和长新冠。我们表明,益处的最重要驱动因素是:既往感染提供的保护程度;疫苗接种提供的保护;自上次感染以来的时间;以及未来的感染率。如果未来感染率很高,且自该年龄组上次大流行浪潮过去已有数月,那么接种疫苗对既往感染儿童可能非常有益。长新冠的益处通常比住院治疗更大,因为长新冠比住院治疗更常见,而且既往感染对其提供的保护更少。我们的框架为政策制定者提供了一个结构,以探索在一系列不良后果和不同参数假设下接种疫苗的额外益处。随着新证据的出现,它可以很容易地更新。