articleThe LancetMar 16, 2022HYBRID OA

Comparative analysis of the risks of hospitalisation and death associated with SARS-CoV-2 omicron (B.1.1.529) and delta (B.1.617.2) variants in England: a cohort study

TNTommy NybergNMNeil M FergusonSGSophie G NashHHHarriet H WebsterSFSeth Flaxman

MRC Biostatistics Unit · NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre · +8 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

The omicron variant (B.1.1.529) of SARS-CoV-2 has demonstrated partial vaccine escape and high transmissibility, with early studies indicating lower severity of infection than that of the delta variant (B.1.617.2). We aimed to better characterise omicron severity relative to delta by assessing the relative risk of hospital attendance, hospital admission, or death in a large national cohort.

Methods

Individual-level data on laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases resident in England between Nov 29, 2021, and Jan 9, 2022, were linked to routine datasets on vaccination status, hospital attendance and admission, and mortality. The relative risk of hospital attendance or admission within 14 days, or death within 28 days after confirmed infection, was estimated using proportional hazards regression. Analyses were stratified by test date, 10-year age band, ethnicity, residential region, and vaccination status, and were further adjusted for sex, index of multiple deprivation decile, evidence of a previous infection, and year of age within each age band. A secondary analysis estimated variant-specific and vaccine-specific vaccine effectiveness and the intrinsic relative severity of omicron infection compared with delta (ie, the relative risk in unvaccinated cases).

Citation impact

1,287
total citations
FWCI
125.53
Percentile
100%
References
23
Citations per year

Authors

52
  • TN
    Tommy NybergCorresponding

    MRC Biostatistics Unit

  • NM
    Neil M Ferguson

    NIHR Imperial Biomedical Research Centre

  • SG
    Sophie G Nash

    UK Health Security Agency

  • HH
    Harriet H Webster

    UK Health Security Agency

  • SF
    Seth Flaxman

    University of Oxford

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Cohort study
  • Cohort
  • Delta
  • Epidemiology
  • Public health
  • Research design
  • MEDLINE
  • Health services research
No related works found for this paper.

Funding