SARS-CoV-2 breakthrough infections during the second wave of COVID-19 at Pune, India.

Prakash P Doke,Suhas T Mhaske,Gauri Oka,Ruta Kulkarni, Vrishali Muley, Akhilesh Chandra Mishra,Vidya A Arankalle

Frontiers in public health(2022)

引用 1|浏览4
暂无评分
摘要
Breakthrough infections following SARS-CoV-2 vaccination remain the global concern. The current study was conducted during the second wave of COVID-19 (1st March-7th July 2021) in Pune, India, at two tertiary care hospitals. Of the 6,159 patients diagnosed as COVID-19, 372/2,210 (16.8%) were breakthrough infections. Of these, 81.1 and 18.8% received one or two doses of Covishield or Covaxin, respectively. Of note, 30.7% patients were with comorbidities, hypertension being the commonest (12.44%). The majority of infections were mild (81.2%). Forty-three patients with breakthrough infections were hospitalized with severe ( = 27, 62.8%) or moderate ( = 16, 37.2%) disease. The receptor binding domain (RBD) sequences from vaccinated ( = 126) and non-vaccinated ( = 168) samples were used for variant analysis. The delta variant was predominant followed by kappa in both vaccinated and non-vaccinated groups. Viral load (qRT-PCR) was not different among these categories. Full-genome comparisons of sequences in relation to vaccination status did not identify any mutation characteristic of the vaccinated group. Irrespective of the number of doses, neutralizing antibody titers (PRNT50) during the first week of clinical disease were higher in the vaccinated patients than the unvaccinated category. In conclusion, though not completely, SARS-CoV-2 vaccines used for country-wide immunization did reduce disease severity among the individuals without any comorbidity by inducing rapid immune response against distinctly different delta and kappa variants. The utility against emerging variants with further mutations need to be carefully examined.
更多
查看译文
关键词
COVID-19,SARS-CoV-2,breakthrough infection,neutralizing antibodies,vaccination,variants
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要