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- Title
Original COVID-19 priming regimen impacts the immunogenicity of bivalent BA.1 and BA.5 boosters.
- Authors
Zaeck, Luca M.; Tan, Ngoc H.; Rietdijk, Wim J. R.; Geers, Daryl; Sablerolles, Roos S. G.; Bogers, Susanne; van Dijk, Laura L. A.; Gommers, Lennert; van Leeuwen, Leanne P. M.; Rugebregt, Sharona; Goorhuis, Abraham; Postma, Douwe F.; Visser, Leo G.; Dalm, Virgil A. S. H.; Lafeber, Melvin; Kootstra, Neeltje A.; Huckriede, Anke L. W.; Haagmans, Bart L.; van Baarle, Debbie; Koopmans, Marion P. G.
- Abstract
Waning antibody responses after COVID-19 vaccination combined with the emergence of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron lineage led to reduced vaccine effectiveness. As a countermeasure, bivalent mRNA-based booster vaccines encoding the ancestral spike protein in combination with that of Omicron BA.1 or BA.5 were introduced. Since then, different BA.2-descendent lineages have become dominant, such as XBB.1.5, JN.1, or EG.5.1. Here, we report post-hoc analyses of data from the SWITCH-ON study, assessing how different COVID-19 priming regimens affect the immunogenicity of bivalent booster vaccinations and breakthrough infections (NCT05471440). BA.1 and BA.5 bivalent vaccines boosted neutralizing antibodies and T-cells up to 3 months after boost; however, cross-neutralization of XBB.1.5 was poor. Interestingly, different combinations of prime-boost regimens induced divergent responses: participants primed with Ad26.COV2.S developed lower binding antibody levels after bivalent boost while neutralization and T-cell responses were similar to mRNA-based primed participants. In contrast, the breadth of neutralization was higher in mRNA-primed and bivalent BA.5 boosted participants. Combined, our data further support the current use of monovalent vaccines based on circulating strains when vaccinating risk groups, as recently recommended by the WHO. We emphasize the importance of the continuous assessment of immune responses targeting circulating variants to guide future COVID-19 vaccination policies. Waning immunity and the emergence of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron lineage led to reduced vaccine effectiveness and required vaccine updates. Here, the authors assess how different priming regimens affect the immunogenicity of BA.1 and BA.5 bivalent boosters.
- Subjects
IMMUNE response; VACCINE effectiveness; COVID-19; BOOSTER vaccines; SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant; T cells
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2024, Vol 15, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-024-48414-x