Recent vaccination and boosters reduce infectiousness, but the risk of infection is still high, ac­cording to a study conducted in California prisons.

 

An examination by re­searchers at UC San Francis­co that looked at transmission between people living in the same cell found that vaccination and boosting, especially when recent, helped to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in California prisons during the first Omicron wave.

 

Advantages of vaccination

The study indicates the advantages of vaccination and boosting in lowering the trans­mission, even in environments where many people are still becoming sick. Additionally, it demonstrates the cumulative effects of boosting and the ad­ditional protection that immuni­zation offers patients who have already contracted the disease. With each extra dose, the chance of transmission decreased by 11 per cent.

 

“A lot of the benefits of vac­cines to reduce infectiousness were from people who had re­ceived boosters and people who had been recently vaccinated,” said Nathan Lo, MD, PhD, a fac­ulty research fellow in the Divi­sion of HIV, Infectious Diseases and Global Medicine at UCSF and the senior author of the study in Nature Medicine. “Our findings are particularly rele­vant to improving health for the incarcerated population.” The researchers analyzed deidenti­fied data collected by the Califor­nia Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR). This included COVID-19 test results, vaccine status and housing lo­cations for 1,11,687 residents, 97 per cent of whom were male, between 15 December, 2021, and 20 May, 2022.

 

Breakthrough infections

Breakthrough infections were common, despite the res­idents’ relatively high vaccina­tion rate of 81 per cent with the primary vaccine series. But the rate of serious illness was low. In just over five months, there were 22,334 confirmed SARS-CoV-2 Omicron infections, 31 hospi­talizations and no COVID-19 deaths. Vaccinated residents with breakthrough infections were significantly less likely to transmit them: 28 per cent ver­sus 36 per cent for those who were unvaccinated. But the like­lihood of transmission grew by 6 per cent for every five weeks that passed since someone’s last vaccine shot.

 

Natural immunity from a prior infection also had a protective effect, and the risk of transmitting the virus was 23 per cent for someone with reinfection compared to 33 per cent for someone who had never been infected.

 

Those with hybrid immunity, from both infection and vaccina­tion, were 40 per cent less likely to transmit the virus. Half of that protection came from the immu­nity that one acquires from fight­ing infection and the other half came from being vaccinated.

The researchers said they were gratified to see that vac­cination confers additional pro­tection even for those who had already been infected, but they were surprised by how much the infection continued to spread, despite the residents’ relatively high vaccination rates.

 

A high amount of transmis­sion

“Regardless of the bene­fits you see in vaccination and prior infection, there is still a high amount of transmission in this study,” said Sophia Tan, a researcher in Lo’s lab and the study’s first author. “We hope these findings can support on­going efforts to protect this vul­nerable population.”

 

This includes making efforts to keep residents current with boosters and increasing the vaccination rate of the prison staff, only 73 per cent of whom had received the primary se­ries at the time of the study. The general rate of boosting could also be improved significantly. At the time of the study, just 59 per cent of residents and 41 per cent of staff had received all the doses recommended by the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), based on their age and health status.

 

“Within the two months following vaccination, people are the least infectious, which indicates that boosters and large timed vaccination cam­paigns may have a role to re­duce transmission in surges,” Lo said. “New ideas are needed since the risk of infection in this vulnerable population remains so great.”

SOURCE: ANI