The Guardian (USA)

Covid vaccines give extra protection to previously infected, studies show

- Andrew Gregory Health editor

Covid-19 vaccines provide significan­t extra protection for people who have already been infected, according to two new studies.

The jabs have proven highly effective in protecting those who have never had Covid, but their effectiven­ess at preventing symptoms and severe outcomes in people who have previously been infected has, until recently, been less clear.

Now two separate pieces of research, published in the Lancet Infectious Diseases journal, confirm that Covid-19 vaccines provide additional protection for people who have already been infected with Sars-CoV-2 – especially against severe disease.In the first study, conducted in Brazil, researcher­s found that four vaccines – CoronaVac, Oxford/AstraZenec­a, Janssen and Pfizer/BioNTech – provide extra protection against symptomati­c reinfectio­n and severe outcomes such as hospitalis­ation and death in people who had previously caught coronaviru­s.The second study, from Sweden, found that vaccinatio­n against Covid-19 provided additional protection to those who had had Covid before, for at least nine months.Together, the studies provide crucial data on vaccine effectiven­ess in people with a prior infection and underline the benefits of getting vaccinated regardless of whether someone has had Covid. Experts say the findings could also help inform global vaccine strategies.“Covid-19 vaccines have been proven to be highly effective at preventing symptomati­c infection and hospitalis­ation among those with no prior infection but effectiven­ess for those with prior infection is less clear,” said the author of the first study, Julio Croda, of Universida­de Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul and Fundação.

“Understand­ing the duration and effectiven­ess of immunity for those vaccinated with a previous Covid-19 diagnosis becomes increasing­ly important as the pandemic progresses and surges … new cases may occur as a result of more transmissi­ble variants. Further research on the need for vaccinatio­n for those with a previous Covid-19 infection is a vital step to pandemic policy interventi­on including guidance on single dose or two dose vaccine protection.”In the first study, which involved more than 22,000 people who became reinfected with Covid, the data showed that being vaccinated reduced their risk of symptoms, being hospitalis­ed or dying.“All four of these vaccines have proven to provide significan­t extra protection for those with a previous Covid-19 infection, reducing hospitalis­ation and death,” said Croda. “There has been ongoing public debate about whether previously infected individual­s need to be vaccinated. Our results suggest that vaccine benefits far outweigh any potential risk and support the case for vaccinatio­n, including the full vaccine series, among individual­s with prior Sars-CoV-2 infection.”Writing in the same journal, Pramod Kumar Garg, of the Translatio­nal Health Science and Technology Institute, India, who was not involved in the study, said: “The results of [the Brazil] study and other recent studies challenge the concept of population-level herd immunity through natural infection alone against Sars-CoV-2 and suggest that vaccinatin­g individual­s who were previously infected provides further protection, particular­ly against severe disease. These data should help guide policy decisions and mitigate vaccine hesitancy among people who had SarsCoV-2 infection.”The second study, involving almost 3 million people, found that one vaccine dose in someone with infection-driven immunity from a previous infection lowered their risk of reinfectio­n by 58% two months after the jab. Two doses of vaccine lowered the risk of infection by 66%.The authors acknowledg­ed limitation­s with both studies, including a risk of bias due to the observatio­nal nature of the research. Additional­ly, neither study included an analysis of reinfectio­n from the Omicron variants.Writing in the same journal, Jennifer Juno, of the University of Melbourne, Australia, who was not involved in either study, said: “These data confirm, in a large cohort, the added protective benefit of vaccinatio­n among individual­s recovered from Covid-19.”

 ?? ?? The studies underline the benefits of getting vaccinated regardless of whether someone has hadCovid. Photograph: Brain light/Alamy
The studies underline the benefits of getting vaccinated regardless of whether someone has hadCovid. Photograph: Brain light/Alamy

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