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Impact of vaccination on the presence and severity of symptoms of hospitalised patients with an infection by the omicron variant (B.1.1.529) of the SARS-cov-2 (subvariant BA.1)

Authors :
Guillaume Beraud
Laura Bouetard
Rok Civljak
Jocelyn Michon
Necla Tulek
Sophie Lejeune
Romain Millot
Aurélie Garchet-Beaudron
Maeva Lefebvre
Petar Velikov
Benjamin Festou
Sophie Abgrall
Ivan Kresimir Lizatovic
Aurélie Baldolli
Huseyin Esmer
Sophie Blanchi
Gabrielle Froidevaux
Nikol Kapincheva
Jean-François Faucher
Mario Duvnjak
Elçin Afşar
Luka Švitek
Saliha Yarimoglu
Rafet Yarimoglu
Cécile Janssen
Olivier Epaulard
Source :
Clinical microbiology and infection : the official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

ObjectivesThe emergence of SARS-CoV-2 variants raised questions over the extent to which vaccines designed in 2020 have remained effective. We aimed to assess whether vaccine status was associated with the severity of Omicron SARS-CoV-2 infection in hospitalised patients.MethodsWe conducted an international, multicentric, retrospective study in 14 centres (Bulgaria, Croatia, France, Turkey). We collected data on patients hospitalised ≥24 hours between 01/12/2021 and 03/03/2022, with PCR-confirmed infection at a time of exclusive Omicron circulation, with hospitalisation related or not to the infection. Patients who had received prophylaxis by monoclonal antibodies were excluded. Patients were considered fully vaccinated if they had received at least 2 injections of either mRNA and/or ChAdOx1-S, or 1 injection of Ad26.CoV2-S vaccines.ResultsAmong the 1215 patients (median [IQR] age 73.0 [57.0; 84.0]; 51.3% males), 746 (61.4%) were fully vaccinated. In multivariate analysis, being vaccinated was associated with lower 28-day mortality (RR=0.50 [0.32-0.77]), ICU admission (R=0.40 [0.26-0.62], and oxygen requirement (RR=0.34 [0.25-0.46]), independently of age and comorbidities. When co-analysing these Omicron patients with 948 Delta patients from a study we recently conducted, Omicron infection was associated with lower 28-day mortality (RR=0.53 [0.37-0.76]), ICU admission (R=0.19 [0.12-0.28], and oxygen requirements (RR=0.50 [0.38-0.67]), independently of age, comorbidities and vaccination status.ConclusionsmRNA- and adenovirus-based vaccines have remained effective on severity of Omicron SARS-CoV-2 infection. Omicron is associated with a lower risk of severe forms, independently of vaccination and patient characteristics.

Details

ISSN :
14690691
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical microbiology and infection : the official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b15c792e74f51c5e92d0a3e604cf8eaa