Back to Search Start Over

Severity of omicron variant of concern and effectiveness of vaccine boosters against symptomatic disease in Scotland (EAVE II) : a national cohort study with nested test-negative design

Authors :
Aziz Sheikh
Steven Kerr
Mark Woolhouse
Jim McMenamin
Chris Robertson
Colin Richard Simpson
Tristan Millington
Ting Shi
Utkarsh Agrawal
Safraj Shahul Hameed
Elliott Hall
Igor Rudan
Syed Ahmar Shah
Lewis Ritchie
Sarah Stock
Colin McCowan
Source :
2022, ' Severity of omicron variant of concern and effectiveness of vaccine boosters against symptomatic disease in Scotland (EAVE II) : a national cohort study with nested test-negative design ', The Lancet Infectious Diseases, vol. 22, no. 7, pp. 959-966 . https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(22)00141-4
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background: Since its emergence in November, 2021, in southern Africa, the SARS-CoV-2 omicron variant of concern (VOC) has rapidly spread across the world. We aimed to investigate the severity of omicron and the extent to which booster vaccines are effective in preventing symptomatic infection. Methods: In this study, using the Scotland-wide Early Pandemic Evaluation and Enhanced Surveillance of COVID-19 (EAVE II) platform, we did a cohort analysis with a nested test-negative design incident case-control study covering the period Nov 1–Dec 19, 2021, to provide initial estimates of omicron severity and the effectiveness of vaccine boosters against symptomatic disease relative to 25 weeks or more after the second vaccine dose. Primary care data derived from 940 general practices across Scotland were linked to laboratory data and hospital admission data. We compared outcomes between infection with the delta VOC (defined as S-gene positive) and the omicron VOC (defined as S-gene negative). We assessed effectiveness against symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection, with infection confirmed through a positive RT-PCR. Findings: By Dec 19, 2021, there were 23 840 S-gene-negative cases in Scotland, which were predominantly among those aged 20–39 years (11 732 [49·2%]). The proportion of S-gene-negative cases that were possible reinfections was more than ten times that of S-gene-positive cases (7·6% vs 0·7%; p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14733099
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
2022, ' Severity of omicron variant of concern and effectiveness of vaccine boosters against symptomatic disease in Scotland (EAVE II) : a national cohort study with nested test-negative design ', The Lancet Infectious Diseases, vol. 22, no. 7, pp. 959-966 . https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(22)00141-4
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4be2f0b5bc67f2a47fc352212f435094