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Immunogenicity of mRNA-1273, BNT162b2 and Ad26.COV2.S COVID-19 vaccines
Vivek Naranbhai; Wilfredo F Garcia-Beltran; Christina Catherine Chang; Christhian Berrios Mairena; Julia Cara Thierauf; Grace Kirkpatrick; Maristela L Onozato; Ju Cheng; Kerri St. Denis; Evan C Lam; Clarety Kaseke; Rhoda Tano-Menka; Diane Yang; Maia Pavlovic; Wendy Yang; Alexander Kui; Tyler E Miller; Michael G Astudillo; Jennifer E Cahill; Anand Dighe; David J Gregory; Mark C Poznansky; Gaurav Gaiha; Alejandro B Balazs; Anthony John Iafrate.
  • Vivek Naranbhai; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Wilfredo F Garcia-Beltran; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Christina Catherine Chang; University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
  • Christhian Berrios Mairena; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Julia Cara Thierauf; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Grace Kirkpatrick; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Maristela L Onozato; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Ju Cheng; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Kerri St. Denis; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Evan C Lam; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Clarety Kaseke; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Rhoda Tano-Menka; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Diane Yang; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Maia Pavlovic; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Wendy Yang; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Alexander Kui; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Tyler E Miller; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Michael G Astudillo; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Jennifer E Cahill; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Anand Dighe; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • David J Gregory; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Mark C Poznansky; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Gaurav Gaiha; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Alejandro B Balazs; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
  • Anthony John Iafrate; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston USA
Preprint En | PREPRINT-MEDRXIV | ID: ppmedrxiv-21260732
BackgroundUnderstanding immunogenicity and effectiveness of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines is critical to guide rational use. MethodsWe compared the immunogenicity of mRNA-1273, BNT-162b2 or Ad26.COV2.S in ambulatory adults in Massachusetts, USA. To correlate immunogenicity with effectiveness of the three vaccines, we performed an inverse-variance meta-analysis of population level effectiveness from public health reports in >40 million individuals. ResultsA single dose of either mRNA vaccine yielded comparable antibody and neutralization titers to convalescent individuals. Ad26.COV2.S yielded lower antibody concentrations and frequently negative neutralization titers. Bulk and cytotoxic T-cell responses were higher in mRNA1273 and BNT162b2 than Ad26.COV2.S recipients, and <50% of vaccinees demonstrate CD8+ T-cell responses to spike peptides. Antibody concentrations and neutralization titers increased comparably after the first dose of either vaccine, and further in recipients of a second dose. Prior infection was associated with high antibody concentrations and neutralization even after a single dose and regardless of vaccine. Neutralization of beta, gamma and delta strains were poorer regardless of vaccine. Relative to mRNA1273, the effectiveness of BNT162b2 was lower against infection and hospitalization; and Ad26COV2.S was lower against infection, hospitalization and death. ConclusionsVariation in the immunogenicity correlates with variable effectiveness of the three FDA EUA vaccines deployed in the USA.

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