Could Vaccine Dose Stretching Reduce COVID-19 Deaths?

W. Więcek, A. Ahuja, M. Kremer, Alexandre Simoes Gomes, Christopher M. Snyder, A. Tabarrok, B. Tan
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

We argue that alternative COVID-19 vaccine dosing regimens could potentially dramatically accelerate global COVID-19 vaccination and reduce mortality, and that the costs of testing these regimens are dwarfed by their potential benefits. We first use the high correlation between neutralizing antibody response and efficacy against disease (Khoury et. al. 2021) to show that half or even quarter doses of some vaccines generate immune responses associated with high vaccine efficacy. We then use an SEIR model to estimate that under these efficacy levels, doubling or quadrupling the rate of vaccination by using fractional doses would dramatically reduce infections and mortality. Since the correlation between immune response and efficacy may not be fully predictive of efficacy with fractional doses, we then use the SEIR model to show that fractional dosing would substantially reduce infections and mortality over a wide range of plausible efficacy levels. Further immunogenicity studies for a range of vaccine and dose combinations could deliver outcomes in weeks and could be conducted with a few hundred healthy volunteers. National regulatory authorities could also decide to test efficacy of fractional dosing in the context of vaccination campaigns based on existing immune response data, as some did for delayed second doses. If efficacy turned out to be high, the approach could be implemented broadly, while if it turned out to be low, downside risk could be limited by administering full doses to those who had received fractional doses. The SEIR model also suggests that delaying second vaccine doses will likely have substantial mortality benefits for multiple, but not all, vaccine-variant combinations, underscoring the importance of ongoing surveillance. Finally, we find that for countries choosing between approved but lower efficacy vaccines available immediately and waiting for mRNA vaccines, using immediately available vaccines typically reduces mortality.
延长疫苗剂量能减少COVID-19死亡吗?
我们认为,替代的COVID-19疫苗剂量方案可能会极大地加速全球COVID-19疫苗接种并降低死亡率,并且与它们的潜在益处相比,测试这些方案的成本相形见绌。我们首先利用中和抗体反应与疾病有效性之间的高度相关性(Khoury et. al. 2021)来表明,某些疫苗的一半甚至四分之一剂量会产生与高疫苗有效性相关的免疫反应。然后,我们使用SEIR模型来估计,在这些效力水平下,通过使用小剂量将疫苗接种率提高一倍或四倍将大大减少感染和死亡率。由于免疫反应和疗效之间的相关性可能不能完全预测分剂量的疗效,因此我们使用SEIR模型表明,在广泛的合理疗效水平范围内,分剂量将大大降低感染和死亡率。针对一系列疫苗和剂量组合的进一步免疫原性研究可在数周内得出结果,并可在数百名健康志愿者中进行。国家监管当局还可以决定在基于现有免疫反应数据的疫苗接种运动背景下测试分次剂量的有效性,就像一些国家对延迟的第二次剂量所做的那样。如果结果证明疗效高,则该方法可以广泛实施,而如果结果证明疗效低,则可以通过对接受部分剂量的人给予全剂量来限制下行风险。SEIR模型还表明,延迟第二次疫苗剂量可能对多种(但不是全部)疫苗变体组合具有实质性的死亡率益处,这强调了持续监测的重要性。最后,我们发现,对于在立即获得批准但效力较低的疫苗和等待mRNA疫苗之间进行选择的国家,使用立即获得的疫苗通常会降低死亡率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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