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SARS-CoV-2 Omicron Variant Neutralization after mRNA-1273 Booster Vaccination

Authors :
Rolando Pajon
Nicole A. Doria-Rose
Xiaoying Shen
Stephen D. Schmidt
Sijy O’Dell
Charlene McDanal
Wenhong Feng
Jin Tong
Amanda Eaton
Maha Maglinao
Haili Tang
Kelly E. Manning
Venkata-Viswanadh Edara
Lilin Lai
Madison Ellis
Kathryn M. Moore
Katharine Floyd
Stephanie L. Foster
Christine M. Posavad
Robert L. Atmar
Kirsten E. Lyke
Tongqing Zhou
Lingshu Wang
Yi Zhang
Martin R. Gaudinski
Walker P. Black
Ingelise Gordon
Mercy Guech
Julie E. Ledgerwood
John N. Misasi
Alicia Widge
Nancy J. Sullivan
Paul C. Roberts
John H. Beigel
Bette Korber
Lindsey R. Baden
Hana El Sahly
Spyros Chalkias
Honghong Zhou
Jing Feng
Bethany Girard
Rituparna Das
Anne Aunins
Darin K. Edwards
Mehul S. Suthar
John R. Mascola
David C. Montefiori
Source :
medRxiv
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 is raising concerns because of its increased transmissibility and potential for reduced susceptibility to antibody neutralization. To assess the potential risk of this variant to existing vaccines, serum samples from mRNA-1273 vaccine recipients were tested for neutralizing activity against Omicron and compared to neutralization titers against D614G and Beta in a pseudovirus assay in two different laboratories. Omicron was 49-84-fold less sensitive to neutralization than D614G and 5.3-6.2-fold less sensitive than Beta when assayed with serum samples obtained 4 weeks after 2 standard inoculations with 100 µg mRNA-1273. A 50 µg boost increased Omicron neutralization titers and may substantially reduce the risk of symptomatic vaccine breakthrough infections.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine
Article

Details

ISSN :
15334406
Volume :
386
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....434cd9ae8fbf1d742cbd087c3d227060