Duration of effectiveness of vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 disease: results of a systematic review and meta-regression
Johns Hopkins University · Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Knowing whether COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness wanes is crucial for informing vaccine policy, such as the need for and timing of booster doses. We aimed to systematically review the evidence for the duration of protection of COVID-19 vaccines against various clinical outcomes, and to assess changes in the rates of breakthrough infection caused by the delta variant with increasing time since vaccination.
This study was designed as a systematic review and meta-regression. We did a systematic review of preprint and peer-reviewed published article databases from June 17, 2021, to Dec 2, 2021. Randomised controlled trials of COVID-19 vaccine efficacy and observational studies of COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness were eligible. Studies with vaccine efficacy or effectiveness estimates at discrete time intervals of people who had received full vaccination and that met predefined screening criteria underwent full-text review. We used random-effects meta-regression to estimate the average change in vaccine efficacy or effectiveness 1-6 months after full vaccination.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 116.53
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 41
Authors
14- DRDaniel R FeikinCorresponding
- MMMelissa M Higdon
Johns Hopkins University
- LJLaith J Abu-Raddad
Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar
- NANick Andrews
UK Health Security Agency
- RARafael Araos
Topics & keywords
- Duration (music)
- Preparedness
- MEDLINE
- Vaccination
- Immunization