Three doses of the same or mixed COVID vaccines work equally well against infections

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Scientists from the Chinese University of Hong Kong found three doses of either the same vaccine or a combination of different vaccine types work comparably well in preventing COVID-19 infections, even against different variants.

The findings suggest that the number of vaccine doses seems to be the key to improving immunity rather than the combinations of vaccine types (which includes mRNA and adenoviral vector vaccines only in this study), and should help inform future public health decision making.

The research is published in The BMJ.

While the effectiveness of individual vaccines for COVID-19 is well known, the effectiveness of vaccine combinations is less clear, especially for particular groups, such as older people and those who are immunocompromised.

Despite a rapid decline in COVID-19 infections and deaths, concerns about waning vaccine immunity and new variants make it important to understand which vaccine combinations are most effective.

In the study, the team reviewed 53 studies involving over 100 million participants with 24 combinations of approved COVID-19 vaccine courses (regimens) and 7 different vaccine types for analysis.

Receiving three doses of the same vaccine is known as a homologous regimen while receiving a third dose that differs from those given as primary doses are known as a heterologous regimen.

The researchers found that three doses of any mRNA vaccine appear to be most effective (96%) against non-severe COVID-19 infections and most effective (95%) in reducing COVID-19 related hospital admission.

Using an mRNA booster after two doses of adenovirus vector vaccines also has satisfactory effectiveness of 88%.

The results also showed that any three-dose regimen (heterologous or homologous) induces higher immunity in all age groups, even in the over 65s, than a two-dose homologous regimen.

A third booster dose is needed to prevent infection caused by the omicron variant.

And in immunocompromised patients, a third mRNA booster dose, as part of a heterologous or homologous regimen, greatly improves protection compared with two doses.

However, the effectiveness of three-dose vaccine regimens against COVID-19-related death remains uncertain.

Nevertheless, this is a well-designed study that summarizes the effectiveness of all available COVID-19 vaccine regimens and determines the relative effects of various primary and boosting regimens as assessed in current clinical studies.

As such, the researchers conclude that while a three-dose mRNA regimen seems to be the most effective in preventing COVID-19 infections, any heterologous and homologous three dose regimens work comparably well in preventing COVID-19 infections, even against different variants.

If you care about COVID, please read studies about new antibody treatment for COVID-19, and COVID-19 vaccines are only 66% effective against Delta variant.

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