Early assessment of the safety and immunogenicity of a third dose (booster) of COVID-19 immunization in Chinese adults
Yuntao Zhang , Yunkai Yang , Niu Qiao , Xuewei Wang , Ling Ding , Xiujuan Zhu , Yu Liang , Zibo Han , Feng Liu , Xinxin Zhang , Xiaoming Yang
Front. Med. ›› 2022, Vol. 16 ›› Issue (1) : 93 -101.
Early assessment of the safety and immunogenicity of a third dose (booster) of COVID-19 immunization in Chinese adults
Inducing durable and effective immunity against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) via vaccination is essential to combat the current pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). It has been noticed that the strength of anti-COVID-19 vaccination-induced immunity fades over time, which calls for an additional vaccination regime, as known as booster immunization, to restore immunity among previously vaccinated populations. Here we report a pilot open-label trial of a third dose of BBIBP-CorV, an inactivated SARS-CoV-2 vaccine (Vero cell), on 136 participants aged between 18 to 63 years. Safety and immunogenicity in terms of neutralizing antibody titers and cytokine/chemokine responses were analyzed as the main endpoint until day 28. While systemic reactogenicity was either absent or mild, SARS-CoV-2-specific neutralizing antibody titers rapidly arose in all participants within 4 weeks, surpassing the peak antibody titers elicited by the initial two-dose immunization regime. Broad increases of cellular immunity-associated cytokines and chemokines were also detected in the majority of participants after the third vaccination. Furthermore, in an exploratory study, a newly developed recombinant protein vaccine, NVSI-06-08 (CHO Cells), was found to be safe and even more effective than BBIBP-CorV in eliciting humoral immune responses in BBIBP-CorV-primed individuals. Together, these results indicate that a third immunization schedule with either homologous or heterologous vaccine showed favorable safety profiles and restored potent SARS-CoV-2-specific immunity, providing support for further trials of booster vaccination in larger populations.
COVID-19 / SARS-CoV-2 / vaccine / immunization / booster immunization
| [1] |
|
| [2] |
WHO. Considerations for the Assessment of COVID-19 Vaccines for Listing by WHO. 2020. accessed December 22, 2021) |
| [3] |
|
| [4] |
|
| [5] |
|
| [6] |
|
| [7] |
|
| [8] |
|
| [9] |
|
| [10] |
|
| [11] |
|
| [12] |
|
| [13] |
|
| [14] |
|
| [15] |
|
| [16] |
|
| [17] |
|
| [18] |
|
| [19] |
|
| [20] |
|
| [21] |
|
| [22] |
|
| [23] |
|
Higher Education Press
Supplementary files
/
| 〈 |
|
〉 |