학술논문

Absolute and Relative Vaccine Effectiveness of Primary and Booster Series of COVID-19 Vaccines (mRNA and Adenovirus Vector) Against COVID-19 Hospitalizations in the United States, December 2021–April 2022
Document Type
article
Author
Lewis, Nathaniel MMurray, NancyAdams, KatherineSurie, DiyaGaglani, ManjushaGinde, Adit AMcNeal, TresaGhamande, ShekharDouin, David JTalbot, H KeippCasey, Jonathan DMohr, Nicholas MZepeski, AnneShapiro, Nathan IGibbs, Kevin WFiles, D ClarkHager, David NAli, HarithPrekker, Matthew EFrosch, Anne EExline, Matthew CGong, Michelle NMohamed, AmiraJohnson, Nicholas JSrinivasan, VasishtSteingrub, Jay SPeltan, Ithan DBrown, Samuel MMartin, Emily TMonto, Arnold SLauring, Adam SKhan, AkramHough, Catherine LBusse, Laurence WBender, WilliamDuggal, AbhijitWilson, Jennifer GGordon, Alexandra JuneQadir, NidaChang, Steven YMallow, ChristopherRivas, CarolinaBabcock, Hilary MKwon, Jennie HChappell, James DHalasa, NatashaGrijalva, Carlos GRice, Todd WStubblefield, William BBaughman, AdrienneLindsell, Christopher JHart, Kimberly WRhoads, Jillian PMcMorrow, Meredith LTenforde, Mark WSelf, Wesley HPatel, Manish MCalhoun, NicoleMurthy, KempapuraHerrick, JudyMcKillop, AmandaHoffman, EricZayed, MarthaSmith, MichaelSteingrub, JayKozikowski, Lori-AnnSouza, Lesley DeOuellette, ScottBolstad, MichaelCoviello, BriannaCiottone, RobertDevilla, ArnaldoGrafals, AnaHiggins, ConorOttanelli, CarloRedman, KimberlyScaffidi, DouglasWeingart, AlexanderPatel, ManishTenforde, MarkLewis, NathanielOlson, SamanthaStephenson, MeaganMcMorrow, MeredithTremarelli, MaraiaTurbyfill, CaitlinMehkri, OmarMitchell, MeganGriffith, ZacharyBrennan, ConneryAshok, KiranPoynter, BryanBusse, Laurence
Source
Open Forum Infectious Diseases. 10(1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Immunization
Biotechnology
Vaccine Related
Prevention
Prevention of disease and conditions
and promotion of well-being
3.4 Vaccines
Good Health and Well Being
absolute vaccine effectiveness
booster vaccine series
COVID-19
primary vaccine series
relative vaccine effectiveness
Influenza and Other Viruses in the Acutely Ill (IVY) Network
Clinical sciences
Medical microbiology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccine effectiveness (VE) studies are increasingly reporting relative VE (rVE) comparing a primary series plus booster doses with a primary series only. Interpretation of rVE differs from traditional studies measuring absolute VE (aVE) of a vaccine regimen against an unvaccinated referent group. We estimated aVE and rVE against COVID-19 hospitalization in primary-series plus first-booster recipients of COVID-19 vaccines.MethodsBooster-eligible immunocompetent adults hospitalized at 21 medical centers in the United States during December 25, 2021-April 4, 2022 were included. In a test-negative design, logistic regression with case status as the outcome and completion of primary vaccine series or primary series plus 1 booster dose as the predictors, adjusted for potential confounders, were used to estimate aVE and rVE.ResultsA total of 2060 patients were analyzed, including 1104 COVID-19 cases and 956 controls. Relative VE against COVID-19 hospitalization in boosted mRNA vaccine recipients versus primary series only was 66% (95% confidence interval [CI], 55%-74%); aVE was 81% (95% CI, 75%-86%) for boosted versus 46% (95% CI, 30%-58%) for primary. For boosted Janssen vaccine recipients versus primary series, rVE was 49% (95% CI, -9% to 76%); aVE was 62% (95% CI, 33%-79%) for boosted versus 36% (95% CI, -4% to 60%) for primary.ConclusionsVaccine booster doses increased protection against COVID-19 hospitalization compared with a primary series. Comparing rVE measures across studies can lead to flawed interpretations of the added value of a new vaccination regimen, whereas difference in aVE, when available, may be a more useful metric.