Updated Covid boosters offer better protection than original: US study

Updated Covid boosters offer better protection than original: US study
Syringes ready to be administered to residents who are over 50 years old and immunocompromised and are eligible to receive their second booster shots of the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) vaccines are seen in Waterford, Michigan, US, on April 8, 2022.
PHOTO: Reuters

Updated Covid-19 boosters offer increased protection against new coronavirus subvariants in people who have previously received up to four doses of the older vaccine, based on data from the first study to assess how the retooled shots are faring in the real world, US officials said on Tuesday (Nov 22).

The findings support results from company studies showing that their updated shots produced higher antibody responses against the BA.4/B.5 subvariants than their original shots after one month.

The study of more than 360,000 people compared updated boosters from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna that target both the original virus and Omicron BA.4/5 coronavirus subvariants with their earlier Covid-19 vaccines. The data was published in the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

The new shots were introduced in the United States in September after they were authorised based on human trials of vaccines that incorporated an earlier Omicron variant, as well as data on the BA.4/BA.5 boosters from studies in labs and animals.

The latest study showed that the vaccines provided greater benefit to those ages 18-49 than for older adults.

When given eight months or more after a prior Covid shot, relative vaccine effectiveness of the new boosters compared with the original shots in preventing symptomatic disease was 56 per cent among people aged 18–49 years, 48 per cent among those 50–64 years, and 43 per cent among persons aged 65 years and older, the study showed.

Vaccine effectiveness dropped to a range of 28 per cent-31 per cent when the boosters were given just two to three months after previous vaccination.

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The authors of the study noted several limitations including that participants may not have accurately recalled their vaccination status, previous infection history, and underlying medical conditions, and that low acceptance of the new boosters could have biased the results.

So far, around 35 million updated boosters have been administered across the United States, representing around 10 per cent of the total population, US data show.

In addition, the results may not be generalisable to future variants, as the dominant variants keep evolving, the authors said.

In just the last two months, the BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 subvariants have become the dominant versions of the coronavirus in the United States, overtaking the BA.5 subvariant of Omicron targeted by the updated boosters.

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