The Lancet Regional Health. Americas (Jan 2023)

Modeling the impact of child vaccination (5–11 y) on overall COVID-19 related hospitalizations and mortality in a context of omicron variant predominance and different vaccination coverage paces in BrazilResearch in context

  • Gabriel Cardozo Müller,
  • Leonardo Souto Ferreira,
  • Felipe Ernesto Mesias Campos,
  • Marcelo Eduardo Borges,
  • Gabriel Berg de Almeida,
  • Silas Poloni,
  • Lorena Mendes Simon,
  • Ângela Maria Bagattini,
  • Michelle Quarti,
  • José Alexandre Felizola Diniz Filho,
  • Roberto André Kraenkel,
  • Renato Mendes Coutinho,
  • Suzi Alves Camey,
  • Ricardo de Souza Kuchenbecker,
  • Cristiana Maria Toscano

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17
p. 100396

Abstract

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Summary: Background: Developing countries have experienced significant COVID-19 disease burden. With the emergence of new variants, particularly omicron, the disease burden in children has increased. When the first COVID-19 vaccine was approved for use in children aged 5–11 years of age, very few countries recommended vaccination due to limited risk-benefit evidence for vaccination of this population. In Brazil, ranking second in the global COVID-19 death toll, the childhood COVID-19 disease burden increased significantly in early 2022. This prompted a risk-benefit assessment of the introduction and scaling-up of COVID-19 vaccination of children. Methods: To estimate the potential impact of vaccinating children aged 5–11 years with mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccine in the context of omicron dominance, we developed a discrete-time SEIR-like model stratified in age groups, considering a three-month time horizon. We considered three scenarios: No vaccination, slow, and maximum vaccination paces. In each scenario, we estimated the potential reduction in total COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, deaths, hospitalization costs, and potential years of life lost, considering the absence of vaccination as the base-case scenario. Findings: We estimated that vaccinating at a maximum pace could prevent, between mid-January and April 2022, about 26,000 COVID-19 hospitalizations, and 4200 deaths in all age groups; of which 5400 hospitalizations and 410 deaths in children aged 5–11 years. Continuing vaccination at a slow/current pace would prevent 1450 deaths and 9700 COVID-19 hospitalizations in all age groups in this same time period; of which 180 deaths and 2390 hospitalizations in children only. Interpretation: Maximum vaccination of children results in a significant reduction of COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths and should be enforced in developing countries with significant disease incidence in children. Funding: This manuscript was funded by the Brazilian Council for Scientific and Technology Development (CNPq – Process # 402834/2020-8).

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