Breakthrough Covid-19 infections during periods of circulating Beta, Delta and Omicron variants of concern, among health care workers in the Sisonke Ad26.COV2.S vaccine trial, South Africa

Author:

Goga AmeenaORCID,Bekker Linda-Gail,Garrett Nigel,Reddy Tarylee,Yende-Zuma Nonhlanhla,Fairall Lara,Moultrie Harry,Takalani Azwidihwi,Trivella Valentina,Faesen Mark,Bailey Veronique,Seocharan Ishen,Gray Glenda E

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundWe report breakthrough infections (BTIs) during periods of circulating Beta, Delta and Omicron variants of concern, among health care workers (HCW) participating in the Sisonke phase 3B Ad26.COV2.S vaccine trial (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT04838795). Data were gathered between 17 February and 15 December 2021. Duration of each period in this study was 89 days for Beta, 180 days or Delta and 30 days for Omicron.ResultsA total of 40 538 BTIs were observed, with 609 during Beta, 22 279 during Delta and 17 650 during Omicron. By 15 December, daily infections during Omicron were three times that seen during the peak observed during Delta. However, unlike the Delta period, with Omicron there was a clear and early de-coupling of hospitalisation from cases as a percentage of the Delta peak curves. Omicron significantly infected a greater proportion of HCW in the 18-30 year age-group, compared with the 55+ age group. There were 1 914 BTI-related hospitalisations - 77, 1 429 and 408 in the Beta (89 days), Delta (180 days) and Omicron (30 days) periods, respectively. During Omicron, 91% hospitalized HCWs required general ward care, 6% high care and 3% intensive care, compared with 89% general ward care, 4% high care and 7% intensive care, during Delta and 78% general care, 7% high care and 16% intensive care during Beta (p<0.001). During Beta and Beta 43% of hospitalized HCW needed supplementary oxygen and 7-8% needed ventilation, compared with 16% and 0.2% respectively during the Omicron period (p<0.001). Median length of hospitalization was significantly lower with Omicron compared with Beta and Delta (3 days compared with 5-6 days, p<0.001).ConclusionsWe illustrate more BTIs but reassuringly less severe Covid-19 with Omicron. Re-infections and Omicron-driven primary infections were likely driven by high population SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence, waning vaccine effectiveness over time, increased Omicron infectivity, Omicron immune evasion or a combination of these and need further investigation. Follow-up of this cohort will continue and reports will be updated, as time and infections accrue.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference12 articles.

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2. Callaway E. Heavily mutated Omicron variant puts scientists on alert. Nature Magazine. 2021. Available from https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/heavily-mutated-omicron-variant-puts-scientists-on-alert/. Accessed 17 December 2021.

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4. World Health Organization. Classification of Omicron (B.1.1.529): SARS-CoV-2 Variant of Concern. Available from https://www.who.int/news/item/26-11-2021-classification-of-omicron-(b.1.1.529)-sars-cov-2-variant-of-concern. Accesed 17 December 2021.

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