Previous BCG vaccination is associated with less severe clinical progression of COVID-19

Author:

Pereira Susan Martins,Barreto Florisneide Rodrigues,de Souza Ramon Andrade,de Souza Teles Santos Carlos Antonio,Pereira MarcosORCID,da Paixão Enny Santos,de Jesus Lima Carla Cristina Oliveira,da Natividade Marcio Santos,Lindoso Ana Angélica Bulcão Portela,Fernandes Eder Gatti,Junior Evonio Barros Campelo,Pescarini Julia Moreira,de Andrade Kaio Vinicius Freitas,de Souza Fernanda Mattos,de Britto Elisangela Alves,Nunes Ceuci,Ichihara Maria Yuri,Dalcolmo Margareth,Trajman Anete,Barral-Netto Manoel,Abubakar Ibrahim,Barreto Mauricio Lima,de Alencar Ximenes Ricardo Arraes,Rodrigues Laura Cunha

Abstract

Abstract Background BCG vaccination, originally used to prevent tuberculosis, is known to “train” the immune system to improve defence against viral respiratory infections. We investigated whether a previous BCG vaccination is associated with less severe clinical progression of COVID-19 Methods A case-control study comparing the proportion with a BCG vaccine scar (indicating previous vaccination) in cases and controls presenting with COVID-19 to health units in Brazil. Cases were subjects with severe COVID-19 (O2 saturation < 90%, severe respiratory effort, severe pneumonia, severe acute respiratory syndrome, sepsis, and septic shock). Controls had COVID-19 not meeting the definition of “severe” above. Unconditional regression was used to estimate vaccine protection against clinical progression to severe disease, with strict control for age, comorbidity, sex, educational level, race/colour, and municipality. Internal matching and conditional regression were used for sensitivity analysis. Results BCG was associated with high protection against COVID-19 clinical progression, over 87% (95% CI 74–93%) in subjects aged 60 or less and 35% (95% CI − 44–71%) in older subjects. Conclusions This protection may be relevant for public health in settings where COVID-19 vaccine coverage is still low and may have implications for research to identify vaccine candidates for COVID-19 that are broadly protective against mortality from future variants. Further research into the immunomodulatory effects of BCG may inform COVID-19 therapeutic research.

Funder

Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Medicine

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