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Longitudinal immune kinetics of COVID-19 booster versus primary series vaccination: Insight into the annual vaccination strategy

Authors
Choi, MJ | Hyun, H  | Heo, JY  | Seo, YB | Noh, JY | Cheong, HJ | Kim, WJ | Kim, HJ | Choi, JY | Lee, YJ | Chung, EJ | Kim, SH | Jeong, H | Kim, B | Song, JY
Citation
Heliyon, 10(5). : e27211-e27211, 2024
Journal Title
Heliyon
ISSN
2405-8440
Abstract
Background: Data on the durability of booster dose immunity of COVID-19 vaccines are relatively limited. Methods: Immunogenicity was evaluated for up to 9–12 months after the third dose of vaccination in 94 healthy adults. Results: Following the third dose, the anti-spike immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody response against the wild-type was boosted markedly, which decreased gradually over time. However, even 9–12 months after the booster dose, both the median and geometric mean of anti-spike IgG antibody levels were higher than those measured 4 weeks after the second dose. Breakthrough infection during the Omicron-dominant period boosted neutralizing antibody titers against Omicron sublineages (BA.1 and BA.5) and the ancestral strain. T-cell immune response was efficiently induced and maintained during the study period. Conclusions: mRNA vaccine booster dose elicited durable humoral immunity for up to 1 year after the third dose and T-cell immunity was sustained during the study period, supporting an annual COVID-19 vaccination strategy.
Keywords

DOI
10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e27211
PMID
38468934
Appears in Collections:
Journal Papers > School of Medicine / Graduate School of Medicine > Infectious Diseases
Ajou Authors
허, 중연  |  현, 학준
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