International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Aug 2023)

Temporal, age, and geographical variation in vaccine efficacy against infection by the Delta and Omicron variants in the community in France, December 2021 to March 2022

  • François Blanquart,
  • Clémence Abad,
  • Joevin Ambroise,
  • Mathieu Bernard,
  • Florence Débarre,
  • Jean-Marc Giannoli,
  • Thomas Rey,
  • Vincent Vieillefond

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 133
pp. 89 – 96

Abstract

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Objectives: We aimed to quantify how the vaccine efficacy of BNT162b2, messenger RNA-1273, AD26.COV2-S, and ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 against detected infection by the SARS-CoV-2 Delta and Omicron variants varied by time since the last dose, vaccine scheme, age, and geographic areas. Methods: We analyzed 3,261,749 community polymerase chain reaction tests conducted by private laboratories in France from December 2021 to March 2022 with a test-negative design comparing vaccinated to unvaccinated individuals. Results: Efficacy against detected infection by Delta was 89% (95% confidence interval, 86-91%) at 2 weeks, down to 59% (56-61%) at 26 weeks and more after the second dose. Efficacy against Omicron was 48% (45-51%) at 2 weeks, down to 4% (2-5%) at 16 weeks after the second dose. A third dose temporarily restored efficacy. Efficacy against Omicron was lower in children and the elderly. Geographical variability in efficacy may reflect variability in the ratio of the number of contacts of vaccinated vs unvaccinated individuals. This ratio ranged from 0 to +50% across departments and correlated with the number of restaurants and bars per inhabitant (beta = 15.0 [0.75-29], P-value = 0.04), places that only vaccinated individuals could access in the study period. Conclusion: SARS-CoV-2 vaccines conferred low and transient protection against Omicron infection.

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