"New data from Britain
suggests that booster protection against symptomatic Covid caused by the
Omicron variant wanes within 10 weeks.
There have not yet been enough
severe cases of Omicron to calculate how well boosters protect against severe
disease, but experts believe the shots will continue to provide significant
protection against hospitalization and death.
“It will be a few weeks before
effectiveness against severe disease with Omicron can be estimated,” the new
report, from Britain’s Health Security Agency, noted. “However, based on
experience with previous variants, this is likely to be substantially higher
than the estimates against symptomatic disease.”
In the weeks since Omicron was discovered,
multiple studies have suggested that the variant is skilled at evading the
antibodies that are produced after vaccination or after infection with the
coronavirus.
The new report from Britain, which
included data on people who had received the AstraZeneca, Pfizer or Moderna
shots, confirmed that the vaccines — both the initial two-shot series and
booster doses — were less effective and waned faster against Omicron than
against Delta.
Among people who received two doses
of the AstraZeneca vaccine, a booster with one of the mRNA vaccines, made by
Pfizer and Moderna, was 60 percent effective at preventing symptomatic disease
two to four weeks after the shot. After 10 weeks, however, the Pfizer booster
was just 35 percent effective. The Moderna booster was 45 percent effective at
up to nine weeks. (The AstraZeneca vaccine is not authorized in the United
States, but the Johnson & Johnson shot uses a similar technology.)
For people who were given three
Pfizer doses, vaccine effectiveness dropped from 70 percent one week after the
booster to 45 percent after 10 weeks.
Pfizer recipients who received a
Moderna booster, on the other hand, seemed to fare better; their vaccine
regimen remained up to 75 percent effective at up to nine weeks.
The report, which was based on an
analysis of about 148,000 Delta cases and 68,000 Omicron cases, also included recent data
suggesting that Omicron infections are less likely to lead to hospitalizationsthan Delta infections. The findings should be interpreted cautiously, theagency noted, because there have still not been many Omicron cases, relativelyspeaking, and the people who have contracted the variant may not be representativeof the broader population.
The Biden administration has been
encouraging all eligible Americans to receive booster shots as Omicron spreads.
In a recent interview
on WCBS-AM, a New York radio station, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s
leading infectious disease doctor, said that officials were monitoring the
effectiveness of mRNA boosters against Omicron.
“I do think it’s premature, at least
on the part of the United States, to be talking about a fourth dose,” he said.
Israel is weighing whether to give a fourth shot to its citizens.
Some scientists have warned against
a fourth shot, noting that there is not yet evidence that it is necessary and
that some immune cells might eventually stop responding to the shots if too
many doses are given."
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