Monitoring COVID‐19 vaccine effectiveness against COVID‐19 hospitalisation and death using electronic health registries in ≥65 years old population in six European countries, October 2021 to November 2022

Author:

Kislaya Irina1ORCID,Sentís Alexis2,Starrfelt Jostein3,Nunes Baltazar1,Martínez‐Baz Iván45,Nielsen Katrine Finderup6,AlKerwi Ala'a7,Braeye Toon8,Fontán‐Vela Mario910,Bacci Sabrina11,Meijerink Hinta3,Castilla Jesús45ORCID,Emborg Hanne‐Dorthe6,Hansen Christian Holm6,Schmitz Susanne7,Van Evercooren Izaak8,Valenciano Marta2,Nardone Anthony2,Nicolay Nathalie11,Monge Susana912ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology Instituto Nacional de Saúde Doutor Ricardo Jorge (INSA) Lisbon Portugal

2. Epidemiology Department Epiconcept Paris France

3. Norwegian Institute of Public Health (NIPH) Oslo Norway

4. Instituto de Salud Pública de Navarra ‐ IdiSNA Pamplona Spain

5. CIBER on Epidemiology and Public Health (CIBERESP) Madrid Spain

6. Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology & Prevention Statens Serum Institut (SSI) Copenhagen Denmark

7. Ministry of Health, Directorate of Health, Service Epidemiology and Statistics Luxembourg Luxembourg

8. Epidemiology of infectious diseases, Sciensano Brussels Belgium

9. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), Madrid Spain

10. Public Health and Epidemiology research group School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Universidad de Alcalá, Alcalá de Henares Madrid Spain

11. Vaccine Preventable Diseases and Immunisation European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) Solna Sweden

12. CIBER on Infectious Diseases (CIBERINFEC) Madrid Spain

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundWithin the ECDC‐VEBIS project, we prospectively monitored vaccine effectiveness (VE) against COVID‐19 hospitalisation and COVID‐19‐related death using electronic health registries (EHR), between October 2021 and November 2022, in community‐dwelling residents aged 65–79 and ≥80 years in six European countries.MethodsEHR linkage was used to construct population cohorts in Belgium, Denmark, Luxembourg, Navarre (Spain), Norway and Portugal. Using a common protocol, for each outcome, VE was estimated monthly over 8‐week follow‐up periods, allowing 1 month‐lag for data consolidation. Cox proportional‐hazards models were used to estimate adjusted hazard ratios (aHR) and VE = (1 − aHR) × 100%. Site‐specific estimates were pooled using random‐effects meta‐analysis.ResultsFor ≥80 years, considering unvaccinated as the reference, VE against COVID‐19 hospitalisation decreased from 66.9% (95% CI: 60.1; 72.6) to 36.1% (95% CI: −27.3; 67.9) for the primary vaccination and from 95.6% (95% CI: 88.0; 98.4) to 67.7% (95% CI: 45.9; 80.8) for the first booster. Similar trends were observed for 65–79 years. The second booster VE against hospitalisation ranged between 82.0% (95% CI: 75.9; 87.0) and 83.9% (95% CI: 77.7; 88.4) for the ≥80 years and between 39.3% (95% CI: −3.9; 64.5) and 80.6% (95% CI: 67.2; 88.5) for 65–79 years. The first booster VE against COVID‐19‐related death declined over time for both age groups, while the second booster VE against death remained above 80% for the ≥80 years.ConclusionsSuccessive vaccine boosters played a relevant role in maintaining protection against COVID‐19 hospitalisation and death, in the context of decreasing VE over time. Multicountry data from EHR facilitate robust near‐real‐time VE monitoring in the EU/EEA and support public health decision‐making.

Funder

European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Epidemiology

Reference28 articles.

1. COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness against symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infections, COVID-19 related hospitalizations and deaths, among individuals aged ≥65 years in Portugal: A cohort study based on data-linkage of national registries February-September 2021

2. Vaccine effectiveness against SARS-CoV-2 infection or COVID-19 hospitalization with the Alpha, Delta, or Omicron SARS-CoV-2 variant: A nationwide Danish cohort study

3. European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC).COVID‐19 Vaccine Tracker[Internet]. [cited 2022 Feb 6]. Available from:https://vaccinetracker.ecdc.europa.eu/public/extensions/COVID-19/vaccine-tracker.html#uptake-tab

4. ECDC.Overview of the implementation of COVID‐19 vaccination strategies and vaccine deployment plans in the EU/EEA: April 2022. ECDC Technical Report.2022.

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