PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Protective effect conferred by prior infection and vaccination on COVID-19 in a healthcare worker cohort in South India.

  • Malathi Murugesan,
  • Prasad Mathews,
  • Hema Paul,
  • Rajiv Karthik,
  • Joy John Mammen,
  • Priscilla Rupali

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0268797
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
p. e0268797

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundThe emergence of newer variants with the immune escape potential raises concerns about breakthroughs and re-infections resulting in future waves of infection. We examined the protective effect of prior COVID-19 disease and vaccination on infection rates among a cohort of healthcare workers (HCW) in South India during the second wave driven mainly by the delta variant.Methods and findingsSymptomatic HCWs were routinely tested by RT-PCR as per institutional policy. Vaccination was offered to all HCWs in late January, and the details were documented. We set up a non-concurrent cohort to document infection rates and estimated protective efficacy of prior infection and vaccination between 16th Apr to 31st May 2021, using a Cox proportional hazards model with time-varying covariates adjusting for daily incidence. Between June 2020 and May 2021, 2735 (23.9%) of 11,405 HCWs were infected, with 1412, including 32 re-infections, reported during the second wave. 6863 HCWs received two doses of vaccine and 1905 one dose. The protective efficacy of prior infection against symptomatic infection was 86.0% (95% CI 76.7%-91.6%). Vaccination combined with prior infection provided 91.1% (95% CI 84.1%-94.9%) efficacy. In the absence of prior infection, vaccine efficacy against symptomatic infection during the second wave was 31.8% (95% CI 23.5%- 39.1%).ConclusionsPrior infection provided substantial protection against symptomatic re-infection and severe disease during a delta variant driven second wave in a cohort of health care workers.