COVID-19 Vaccine Effectiveness Studies against Symptomatic and Severe Outcomes during the Omicron Period in Four Countries in the Eastern Mediterranean Region

Author:

Runge Manuela1ORCID,Karimian Zahra23ORCID,Kheirandish Mehrnaz2,Borghi Giulio1ORCID,Wodniak Natalie1,Fahmy Kamal4,Mantel Carsten1ORCID,Cherian Thomas1ORCID,Nabil Ahmed Said Zeinab5,Najafi Farid6,Thneibat Fatima7,Ul-Haq Zia89,Fazid Sheraz8ORCID,Ibrahim Salama Iman10,Khosravi Shadmani Fatemeh6,Alrawashdeh Ahmad11,Sirous Shadrokh12ORCID,Bellizzi Saverio13,Ahmed Amira14,Lukwiya Michael15,Rashidian Arash2,

Affiliation:

1. MMGH Consulting, 8049 Zurich, Switzerland

2. Division of Science, Information and Dissemination, WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean, Cairo 11371, Egypt

3. Heidelberg Institute of Global Health, Heidelberg University Hospital, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany

4. Division of Communicable Diseases, WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean, Cairo 11516, Egypt

5. Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Faculty of Medicine (for Girls), Al-Azhar University, Cairo 11651, Egypt

6. Research Center for Environmental Determinants of Health (RCEDH), Health Institute, Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences, Kermanshah 6713954658, Iran

7. Jordan Ministry of Health, Amman 11118, Jordan

8. Institute of Public Health and Social Sciences, Khyber Medical University, Peshawar 25100, Pakistan

9. Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, UK

10. Department of Community Medicine Research, National Research Centre, Cairo 12622, Egypt

11. Department of Allied Medical Sciences, Jordan University of Science and Technology, Amman 3030, Jordan

12. WHO Country Office for Iran, Tehran 8453193445, Iran

13. WHO Country Office for Jordan, Amman 11181, Jordan

14. WHO Country Office for Egypt, Cairo 11516, Egypt

15. WHO Country Office for Pakistan, Islamabad P.O. Box 1013 44000, Pakistan

Abstract

Vaccine effectiveness (VE) studies provide real-world evidence to monitor vaccine performance and inform policy. The WHO Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean supported a regional study to assess the VE of COVID-19 vaccines against different clinical outcomes in four countries between June 2021 and August 2023. Health worker cohort studies were conducted in 2707 health workers in Egypt and Pakistan, of whom 171 experienced symptomatic laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection. Test-negative design case–control studies were conducted in Iran and Jordan in 4017 severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) patients (2347 controls and 1670 cases) during the Omicron variant dominant period. VE estimates were calculated for each study and pooled by study design for several vaccine types (BBIBP-CorV, AZD1222, BNT162b2, and mRNA-1273, among others). Among health workers, VE against symptomatic infection of a complete primary series could only be computed compared to partial vaccination, suggesting a benefit of providing an additional dose of mRNA vaccines (VE: 88.9%, 95%CI: 15.3–98.6%), while results were inconclusive for other vaccine products. Among SARI patients, VE against hospitalization of a complete primary series with any vaccine compared to non-vaccinated was 20.9% (95%CI: 4.5–34.5%). Effectiveness estimates for individual vaccines, booster doses, and secondary outcomes (intensive care unit admission and death) were inconclusive. Future VE studies will need to address challenges in both design and analysis when conducted late during a pandemic and will be able to utilize the strengthened capacities in countries.

Funder

World Health Organization

Publisher

MDPI AG

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