npj Vaccines (Jun 2024)

Association between antibody responses post-vaccination and severe COVID-19 outcomes in Scotland

  • Calum Macdonald,
  • Norah Palmateer,
  • Andrew McAuley,
  • Laura Lindsay,
  • Taimoor Hasan,
  • Safraj Shahul Hameed,
  • Elliot Hall,
  • Karen Jeffrey,
  • Zoë Grange,
  • Petros Gousias,
  • Sally Mavin,
  • Lisa Jarvis,
  • J. Claire Cameron,
  • Luke Daines,
  • Holly Tibble,
  • Colin R. Simpson,
  • Colin McCowan,
  • Srinivasa Vittal Katikireddi,
  • Igor Rudan,
  • Adeniyi Francis Fagbamigbe,
  • Lewis Ritchie,
  • Ben Swallow,
  • Paul Moss,
  • Chris Robertson,
  • Aziz Sheikh,
  • Josie Murray

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41541-024-00898-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Several population-level studies have described individual clinical risk factors associated with suboptimal antibody responses following COVID-19 vaccination, but none have examined multimorbidity. Others have shown that suboptimal post-vaccination responses offer reduced protection to subsequent SARS-CoV-2 infection; however, the level of protection from COVID-19 hospitalisation/death remains unconfirmed. We use national Scottish datasets to investigate the association between multimorbidity and testing antibody-negative, examining the correlation between antibody levels and subsequent COVID-19 hospitalisation/death among double-vaccinated individuals. We found that individuals with multimorbidity ( ≥ five conditions) were more likely to test antibody-negative post-vaccination and 13.37 [6.05–29.53] times more likely to be hospitalised/die from COVID-19 than individuals without conditions. We also show a dose-dependent association between post-vaccination antibody levels and COVID-19 hospitalisation or death, with those with undetectable antibody levels at a significantly higher risk (HR 9.21 [95% CI 4.63–18.29]) of these serious outcomes compared to those with high antibody levels.