Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2024)

Population-Based Evaluation of Vaccine Effectiveness against SARS-CoV-2 Infection, Severe Illness, and Death, Taiwan

  • Cheng-Yi Lee,
  • Hung-Wei Kuo,
  • Yu-Lun Liu,
  • Jen-Hsiang Chuang,
  • Jih-Haw Chou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid3003.230893
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 3
pp. 478 – 489

Abstract

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Taiwan provided several COVID-19 vaccine platforms: mRNA (BNT162b2, mRNA-1273), adenoviral vector-based (AZD1222), and protein subunit (MVC-COV1901). After Taiwan shifted from its zero-COVID strategy in April 2022, population-based evaluation of vaccine effectiveness (VE) became possible. We conducted an observational cohort study of 21,416,151 persons to examine VE against SARS-CoV-2 infection, moderate and severe illness, and death during March 22, 2021–September 30, 2022. After adjusting for age and sex, we found that persons who completed 3 vaccine doses (2 primary, 1 booster) or received MVC-COV1901 as the primary series had the lowest hospitalization incidence (0.04–0.20 cases/100,000 person-days). We also found 95.8% VE against hospitalization for 3 doses of BNT162b2, 91.0% for MVC-COV1901, 81.8% for mRNA-1273, and 65.7% for AZD1222, which had the lowest overall VE. Our findings indicated that protein subunit vaccines provide similar protection against SARS-CoV-2­­–associated hospitalization as mRNA vaccines and can inform mix-and-match vaccine selection in other countries.

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