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Time to reinfection and vaccine breakthrough SARS-CoV-2 infections: a retrospective cohort study
Sevda Molani; Andrew M Baumgartner; Yeon Mi Hwang; Venkata R Duvvuri; Jason Goldman; Jennifer J Hadlock.
Affiliation
  • Sevda Molani; Institute For Systems Biology
  • Andrew M Baumgartner; Institute for Systems Biology
  • Yeon Mi Hwang; Institute for Systems Biology
  • Venkata R Duvvuri; Institute for Systems Biology
  • Jason Goldman; Swedish Medical Center
  • Jennifer J Hadlock; Institute for System Biology
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-22270613
ABSTRACT
BackgroundIt is important to understand how BNT162b2, mRNA-1273, and JNJ-78436735 COVID-19 vaccines, as well as prior infection, protect against breakthrough cases and reinfections. Real world evidence on acquired immunity from vaccines, and from SARS-CoV-2 infection, can help public health decision-makers understand disease dynamics and viral escape to inform resource allocation for curbing the spread of pandemic. MethodsThis retrospective cohort study presents demographic information, survival functions, and probability distributions for 2,627,914 patients who received recommended doses of COVID-19 vaccines, and 63,691 patients who had a prior COVID-19 infection. In addition, patients receiving different vaccines were matched by age, sex, ethnic group, state of residency, and the quarter of the year in 2021 the COVID-19 vaccine was completed, to support survival analysis on pairwise matched cohorts. FindingsEach of the three vaccines and infection-induced immunity all showed a high probability of survival against breakthrough or reinfection cases (mRNA-1273 0.997, BNT162b2 0.997, JNJ-78436735 0.992, previous infection 0.965 at 180 days). The incidence rate of reinfection among those unvaccinated and previously infected was higher than that of breakthrough among the vaccinated population (reinfection 0.9%; breakthrough0.4%). In addition, 280 vaccinated patients died (0.01% all-cause mortality) within 21 days of the last vaccine dose, and 5898 (3.1 %) died within 21 days of a positive COVID-19 test. ConclusionsDespite a gradual decline in vaccine-induced and infection-induced immunity, both acquired immunities were highly effective in preventing breakthrough and reinfection. In addition, for unvaccinated patients with COVID-19, those who did not die within 90 days of their initial infection (9565 deaths, 5.0% all-cause mortality rate), had a comparable asymptotic pattern of breakthrough infection as those who acquired immunity from a vaccine. Overall, the risks associated with COVID-19 infection are far greater than the marginal advantages of immunity acquired by prior infection.
License
cc_by_nc
Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Cohort_studies / Observational study / Prognostic study Language: English Year: 2022 Document type: Preprint
Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Cohort_studies / Observational study / Prognostic study Language: English Year: 2022 Document type: Preprint
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