Effectiveness of Original Monovalent and Bivalent COVID-19 Vaccines Against COVID-19-Associated Hospitalization and Severe In-Hospital Outcomes Among Adults in the United States, September 2022-August 2023
Author Department
Medicine
Document Type
Article, Peer-reviewed
Publication Date
11-2024
Abstract
Background: Assessments of COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness are needed to monitor the protection provided by updated vaccines against severe COVID-19. We evaluated the effectiveness of original monovalent and bivalent (ancestral strain and Omicron BA.4/5) COVID-19 vaccination against COVID-19-associated hospitalization and severe in-hospital outcomes.
Methods: During September 8, 2022 to August 31, 2023, adults aged ≥ 18 years hospitalized with COVID-19-like illness were enrolled at 26 hospitals in 20 US states. Using a test-negative case-control design, we estimated vaccine effectiveness (VE) with multivariable logistic regression adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, admission date, and geographic region.
Results: Among 7028 patients, 2924 (41.6%) were COVID-19 case patients, and 4104 (58.4%) were control patients. Compared to unvaccinated patients, absolute VE against COVID-19-associated hospitalization was 6% (-7%-17%) for original monovalent doses only (median time since last dose [IQR] = 421 days [304-571]), 52% (39%-61%) for a bivalent dose received 7-89 days earlier, and 13% (-10%-31%) for a bivalent dose received 90-179 days earlier. Absolute VE against COVID-19-associated invasive mechanical ventilation or death was 51% (34%-63%) for original monovalent doses only, 61% (35%-77%) for a bivalent dose received 7-89 days earlier, and 50% (11%-71%) for a bivalent dose received 90-179 days earlier.
Conclusion: Bivalent vaccination provided protection against COVID-19-associated hospitalization and severe in-hospital outcomes within 3 months of receipt, followed by a decline in protection to a level similar to that remaining from previous original monovalent vaccination by 3-6 months. These results underscore the benefit of remaining up to date with recommended COVID-19 vaccines.
Keywords: COVID‐19; COVID‐19 vaccines; United States; adult; hospitalization.
Recommended Citation
DeCuir J, Surie D, Zhu Y, Lauring AS, Gaglani M, McNeal T, Ghamande S, Peltan ID, Brown SM, Ginde AA, Steinwand A, Mohr NM, Gibbs KW, Hager DN, Ali H, Frosch A, Gong MN, Mohamed A, Johnson NJ, Srinivasan V, Steingrub JS, Khan A, Busse LW, Duggal A, Wilson JG, Qadir N, Chang SY, Mallow C, Kwon JH, Exline MC, Shapiro NI, Columbus C, Vaughn IA, Ramesh M, Safdar B, Mosier JM, Casey JD, Talbot HK, Rice TW, Halasa N, Chappell JD, Grijalva CG, Baughman A, Womack KN, Rhoads JP, Swan SA, Johnson C, Lewis N, Ellington S, Dawood FS, McMorrow M, Self WH; Investigating Respiratory Viruses in the Acutely Ill (IVY) Network. Effectiveness of Original Monovalent and Bivalent COVID-19 Vaccines Against COVID-19-Associated Hospitalization and Severe In-Hospital Outcomes Among Adults in the United States, September 2022-August 2023. Influenza Other Respir Viruses. 2024 Nov;18(11):e70027. doi: 10.1111/irv.70027.
PMID
39496339