1. A review of the immunogenicity and safety of booster doses of omicron variant-containing mRNA-1273 COVID-19 vaccines in adults and children.
- Author
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Priddy F, Chalkias S, Essink B, Whatley J, Brosz A, Lee IT, Feng J, Tracy L, Deng W, Zhou W, Zhou H, Dixit A, Schnyder-Ghamloush S, Girard B, de Windt E, Yeakey A, Miller J, Das R, and Kuter BJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Child, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 immunology, COVID-19 Vaccines immunology, COVID-19 Vaccines administration & dosage, COVID-19 Vaccines adverse effects, 2019-nCoV Vaccine mRNA-1273 immunology, SARS-CoV-2 immunology, SARS-CoV-2 genetics, Immunization, Secondary methods, Immunogenicity, Vaccine
- Abstract
Introduction: Vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 is an integral pillar of the public health approach to COVID-19. With the emergence of variants of concern that increase transmissibility and escape from vaccine- or infection-induced protection, vaccines have been developed to more closely match the newly circulating SARS-CoV-2 strains to improve protection. The safety and immunogenicity of multiple authorized messenger RNA (mRNA)-based COVID-19 vaccines targeting the omicron sublineage (BA.1, BA.4/BA.5, and XBB.1.5) have been demonstrated in several clinical trials among adults and children., Areas Covered: This review will comprehensively detail the available evidence (published through July 2024) from ongoing clinical trials on omicron variant-containing mRNA-1273 vaccines administered as additional doses in previously vaccinated target demographics., Expert Opinion: Across three clinical trials, omicron variant-containing mRNA-1273 vaccines induced immune responses to vaccine-matched omicron strains as well as ancestral SARS-CoV-2, with a safety and reactogenicity profile comparable to the original mRNA-1273 vaccine. Combined with pivotal data demonstrating the safety, efficacy, and effectiveness of the original mRNA-1273 vaccine, these findings support the use of variant-containing mRNA-1273 vaccines and provide confidence that expeditious development of updated vaccines using this established mRNA platform can maintain protection against COVID-19.
- Published
- 2024
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