Epidemiological characteristics and antibody kinetics of elderly population with booster vaccination following both Omicron BA.5 and XBB waves in China

Author:

Zhao Xin‐Jing12,Liu Xiao‐Lin3,Liang Yu‐Min4,Zhang Sheng1,Liu Ti3,Li Li‐Bo4,Jiang Wen‐Guo4,Chen Jin‐Jin1,Xu Qiang1,Lv Chen‐Long1,Jiang Bao‐Gui1,Kou Zeng‐Qiang3,Wang Guo‐Lin1ORCID,Fang Li‐Qun12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Pathogen and Biosecurity Academy of Military Medical Science Beijing China

2. Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics, School of Public Health Anhui Medical University Hefei China

3. Institute of Infectious Disease Control and Prevention Shandong Center for Disease Control and Prevention Jinan China

4. Department of Infectious Disease Control and Prevention Jining Center for Disease Control and Prevention Jining China

Abstract

AbstractAfter the termination of zero‐COVID‐19 policy, the populace in China has experienced both Omicron BA.5 and XBB waves. Considering the poor antibody responses and severe outcomes observed among the elderly following infection, we conducted a longitudinal investigation to examine the epidemiological characteristics and antibody kinetics among 107 boosted elderly participants following the Omicron BA.5 and XBB waves. We observed that 96 participants (89.7%) were infected with Omicron BA.5, while 59 (55.1%) participants were infected with Omicron XBB. Notably, 52 participants (48.6%) experienced dual infections of both Omicron BA.5 and XBB. The proportion of symptomatic cases appeared to decrease following the XBB wave (18.6%) compared to that after the BA.5 wave (59.3%). Omicron BA.5 breakthrough infection induced lower neutralizing antibody titers against XBB.1.5, BA.2.86, and JN.1, while reinfection with Omicron XBB broadened the antibody responses against all measured Omicron subvariants and may alleviate the wild type‐vaccination induced immune imprinting. Boosted vaccination type and comorbidities were the significant factors associated with antibody responses. Updated vaccines based on emerging severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 variants are needed to control the Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic in the elderly.

Funder

Beijing Municipal Natural Science Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province

Publisher

Wiley

Reference48 articles.

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