1. Vaccine effectiveness of CoronaVac against symptomatic and severe COVID-19 among children in Brazil during the Omicron period
- Author
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Pilar Florentino, Flávia Alves, Thiago Cerqueira-Silva, Vinicius de Araujo Oliveira, Juracy Bertoldo Júnior, Adelson Jantsch, Gerson Penna, Viviane Boaventura, Guilherme Werneck, Neil Pearce, Manoel Barral-Netto, Maurício Barreto, and Enny Paixao
- Abstract
Compared to previous variants, the SARS-CoV-2 B.1.1.529 (Omicron) variant has relatively high infection rates, including among children. Even though severe COVID-19 in children is rare, this group is susceptible to the multisystem inflammatory syndrome in Children (MIS-C), long-COVID and downstream effects of COVID-19, including social isolation and education disruption. There is evidence that vaccination with an mRNA vaccine offers protection against infection and severe forms of COVID-19 for children. However, data on the effectiveness of inactivated virus vaccine, the most used platform worldwide, is scarce during the Omicron period. In Brazil, children between 6 to 11 years are eligible to receive the CoronaVac vaccine. Using a national linked database from January 21, 2022, up to April 19, 2022, during the Omicron dominant period in Brazil, we conducted a test-negative design with 194,258 tests to assess CoronaVac effectiveness against infection and severe (hospitalisation or death) outcomes among children aged 6 to 11 years. The estimated VE for symptomatic infection was 35.0% (95% CI 27.7–41.5) at 0–13 days and 41.5% (95% CI: 34.4–47.7) at ≥ 14 days post-second dose. For severe outcomes (hospitalisation or death) VE was 69.2% (95% CI: 11.7–93.6) at 0–13 days and 63.5% (95% CI: 5.8–90.0). Two doses of CoronaVac in children during the Omicron period showed low levels of protection against symptomatic infection, and modest levels against severe illness.
- Published
- 2022
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