Age and Comorbidities as Risk Factors for Severe COVID-19 in Mexico, before, during and after Massive Vaccination

Author:

Domínguez-Ramírez Lenin1,Sosa-Jurado Francisca2ORCID,Díaz-Sampayo Guadalupe1,Solis-Tejeda Itzel1,Rodríguez-Pérez Francisco1,Pelayo Rosana34,Santos-López Gerardo2ORCID,Cortes-Hernandez Paulina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Population Health and Metadynamics Lab, Centro de Investigacion Biomedica de Oriente, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social Atlixco, Atlixco 74360, Puebla, Mexico

2. Virology Lab, Centro de Investigacion Biomedica de Oriente, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, Atlixco 74360, Puebla, Mexico

3. Oncoimmunology and Cytomics Lab, Centro de Investigacion Biomedica de Oriente, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, Atlixco 74360, Puebla, Mexico

4. Unidad de Educación e Investigación, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, Dirección de Prestaciones Médicas, Mexico City 06725, Mexico

Abstract

During 2020–2023, Mexico had a large COVID-19 emergency with >331,000 adult deaths and one of the highest excess mortalities worldwide. Age at COVID-19 death has been lower in Mexico than in high-income countries, presumably because of the young demographics and high prevalence of chronic metabolic diseases in young and middle-aged adults. SARS-CoV-2 vaccination covered 85% of adults with at least one dose and 50% with booster(s) up to April 2022. No new vaccination efforts or updated boosters were introduced until October 2023; thus, we explored the public health impact of massive SARS-CoV-2 vaccination against ancestral strains and asked whether their real-world protection has persisted through time. We compared three periods with respect to vaccine roll-outs: before, during and after vaccine introduction in a national retrospective cohort of >7.5 million COVID-19 cases. The main findings were that after vaccination, COVID-19 mortality decreased, age at COVID-19 death increased by 5–10 years, both in populations with and without comorbidities; obesity stopped being a significant risk factor for COVID-19 death and protection against severe disease persisted for a year after boosters, including at ages 60–79 and 80+. Middle-aged adults had the highest protection from vaccines/hybrid immunity and they more than halved their proportions in COVID-19 deaths.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Drug Discovery,Pharmacology,Immunology

Reference47 articles.

1. Prevalencia de Anticuerpos y Vacunación Contra SARS-CoV-2 En 2022 En México;Carnalla;Salud Pública México,2023

2. Effectiveness of a Nationwide COVID-19 Vaccination Program in Mexico against Symptomatic COVID-19, Hospitalizations, and Death: A Retrospective Analysis of National Surveillance Data;Int. J. Infect. Dis.,2023

3. Decrease in COVID-19 Adverse Outcomes in Adults during the Delta and Omicron SARS-CoV-2 Waves, after Vaccination in Mexico;Pelayo;Front. Public Health,2022

4. Genómica, C.M.d.V. (2023, June 06). CoViGen-Mex. Available online: http://mexcov2.ibt.unam.mx:8080/COVID-TRACKER/.

5. (2023, September 10). Population Pyramids of the World from 1950 to 2100. Database: Population Pyramid. Available online: https://www.populationpyramid.net/mexico/2020/.

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