For fully vaccinated adults, a booster of any of the FDA-authorized COVID-19 vaccines was found to enhance immunity.
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The "mix-and-match" strategy "simplifies the distribution of vaccines,” said Dr. Christine Johnston.
In adults who had previously received a full regimen of a COVID-19 vaccine approved or authorized by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), an additional dose of any of these COVID-19 vaccines was safe and prompted an immune response, according to study findings published Jan. 26 in The New England Journal of Medicine.
The study’s preliminary data informed the FDA’s recommendation in October to allow mix-and-match of COVID-19 vaccine boosters—that is, to administer boosters whose formulation differs from that of the primary vaccine series.
“This strategy provides people with more options to receive a different formulation if it’s all that is available. It simplifies the distribution of vaccines to get boosters in as many people as possible,” said Dr. Christine Johnston, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Washington School of Medicine. She oversaw a Seattle trial site that enrolled 46 study participants and was one of 10 participating institutions nationwide.
The findings are from an ongoing trial conducted by members of the Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Consortium (IDCRC) and sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). The trial began enrollment in May 2021. Its principal investigators are Drs. Robert Atmar of Baylor College of Medicine in Texas and Kirsten Lyke of the University of Maryland School of Medicine.
The report describes findings from 458 adult volunteers who had been fully vaccinated with one of the three Emergency Use Authorization COVID-19 vaccines at least 12 weeks prior to enrollment and who had no reported history of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Among the fully vaccinated adults:
Additionally, T cell responses were measured. Cellular CD4 Th1 responses directed against the spike protein increased in all groups except for volunteers who received a single dose of Johnson & Johnson followed by a booster of Johnson & Johnson. However, CD8 T cell responses were more durable in Johnson & Johnson recipients and in those who received an mRNA primary series (Moderna or Pfizer) followed by Johnson & Johnson boost.
“Mix-and-match is not a new approach – it is a well-known principle in vaccine science research. Mixing vaccine platforms can elicit a stronger, longer-lasting response than a single vaccine regimen and could help us fight variants,” Lyke said.
NIAID grants supporting this research are UM1AI48372, UM1AI148373, UM1AI148450, UM1AI148452, UM1AI148573, UM1AI148574, UM1AI148575, UM1AI148576, UM1AI148684, UM1 AI148689 and with support from the NIAID Collaborative Influenza Vaccine Innovation Centers contract 75N93019C00050.
Publication: Robert L. Atmar, et al. Homologous and Heterologous Covid-19 Booster Vaccinations. The New England Journal of Medicine, (2023). DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2116414
Original Story Source: University of Washington