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Impact of SARS-CoV-2 vaccination of children ages 5–11 years on COVID-19 disease burden and resilience to new variants in the United States, November 2021–March 2022: a multi-model studyResearch in context

Authors :
Rebecca K. Borchering
Luke C. Mullany
Emily Howerton
Matteo Chinazzi
Claire P. Smith
Michelle Qin
Nicholas G. Reich
Lucie Contamin
John Levander
Jessica Kerr
J. Espino
Harry Hochheiser
Kaitlin Lovett
Matt Kinsey
Kate Tallaksen
Shelby Wilson
Lauren Shin
Joseph C. Lemaitre
Juan Dent Hulse
Joshua Kaminsky
Elizabeth C. Lee
Alison L. Hill
Jessica T. Davis
Kunpeng Mu
Xinyue Xiong
Ana Pastore y Piontti
Alessandro Vespignani
Ajitesh Srivastava
Przemyslaw Porebski
Srini Venkatramanan
Aniruddha Adiga
Bryan Lewis
Brian Klahn
Joseph Outten
Benjamin Hurt
Jiangzhuo Chen
Henning Mortveit
Amanda Wilson
Madhav Marathe
Stefan Hoops
Parantapa Bhattacharya
Dustin Machi
Shi Chen
Rajib Paul
Daniel Janies
Jean-Claude Thill
Marta Galanti
Teresa Yamana
Sen Pei
Jeffrey Shaman
Guido España
Sean Cavany
Sean Moore
Alex Perkins
Jessica M. Healy
Rachel B. Slayton
Michael A. Johansson
Matthew Biggerstaff
Katriona Shea
Shaun A. Truelove
Michael C. Runge
Cécile Viboud
Justin Lessler
Source :
The Lancet Regional Health. Americas, Vol 17, Iss , Pp 100398- (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

Summary: Background: The COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub convened nine modeling teams to project the impact of expanding SARS-CoV-2 vaccination to children aged 5–11 years on COVID-19 burden and resilience against variant strains. Methods: Teams contributed state- and national-level weekly projections of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths in the United States from September 12, 2021 to March 12, 2022. Four scenarios covered all combinations of 1) vaccination (or not) of children aged 5–11 years (starting November 1, 2021), and 2) emergence (or not) of a variant more transmissible than the Delta variant (emerging November 15, 2021). Individual team projections were linearly pooled. The effect of childhood vaccination on overall and age-specific outcomes was estimated using meta-analyses. Findings: Assuming that a new variant would not emerge, all-age COVID-19 outcomes were projected to decrease nationally through mid-March 2022. In this setting, vaccination of children 5–11 years old was associated with reductions in projections for all-age cumulative cases (7.2%, mean incidence ratio [IR] 0.928, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.880–0.977), hospitalizations (8.7%, mean IR 0.913, 95% CI 0.834–0.992), and deaths (9.2%, mean IR 0.908, 95% CI 0.797–1.020) compared with scenarios without childhood vaccination. Vaccine benefits increased for scenarios including a hypothesized more transmissible variant, assuming similar vaccine effectiveness. Projected relative reductions in cumulative outcomes were larger for children than for the entire population. State-level variation was observed. Interpretation: Given the scenario assumptions (defined before the emergence of Omicron), expanding vaccination to children 5–11 years old would provide measurable direct benefits, as well as indirect benefits to the all-age U.S. population, including resilience to more transmissible variants. Funding: Various (see acknowledgments).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2667193X
Volume :
17
Issue :
100398-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Lancet Regional Health. Americas
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.56dc285063ed48bba77f73bc94c5e710
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lana.2022.100398