Projecting Omicron scenarios in the US while tracking population-level immunity

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Epidemics Pub Date : 2024-02-10 DOI:10.1016/j.epidem.2024.100746
Anass Bouchnita , Kaiming Bi , Spencer J. Fox , Lauren Ancel Meyers
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Abstract

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, changes in policy, shifts in behavior, and the emergence of new SARS-CoV-2 variants spurred multiple waves of transmission. Accurate assessments of the changing risks were vital for ensuring adequate healthcare capacity, designing mitigation strategies, and communicating effectively with the public. Here, we introduce a model of COVID-19 transmission and vaccination that provided rapid and reliable projections as the BA.1, BA.4 and BA.5 variants emerged and spread across the US. For example, our three-week ahead national projection of the early 2021 peak in COVID-19 hospitalizations was only one day later and 11.6–13.3% higher than the actual peak, while our projected peak in mortality was two days earlier and 0.22–4.7% higher than reported. We track population-level immunity from prior infections and vaccination in terms of the percent reduction in overall susceptibility relative to a completely naive population. As of October 1, 2022, we estimate that the US population had a 36.52% reduction in overall susceptibility to the BA.4/BA.5 variants, with 61.8%, 15.06%, and 23.54% of immunity attributable to infections, primary series vaccination, and booster vaccination, respectively. We retrospectively projected the potential impact of expanding booster coverage starting on July 15, 2022, and found that a five-fold increase in weekly boosting rates would have resulted in 70% of people over 65 vaccinated by Oct 10, 2022 and averted 25,000 (95% CI: 14,400–35,700) deaths during the BA.4/BA.5 surge. Our model provides coherent variables for tracking population-level immunity in the increasingly complex landscape of variants and vaccines and enables robust simulations of plausible scenarios for the emergence and mitigation of novel COVID variants.

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在跟踪人口免疫情况的同时预测美国的 Omicron 情景
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,政策的变化、行为的转变以及新的 SARS-CoV-2 变种的出现引发了多波传播。对不断变化的风险进行准确评估对于确保足够的医疗保健能力、设计缓解策略以及与公众进行有效沟通至关重要。在此,我们介绍了 COVID-19 传播和疫苗接种模型,该模型可在 BA.1、BA.4 和 BA.5 变种出现并在美国蔓延时提供快速可靠的预测。例如,我们对 2021 年初 COVID-19 住院高峰提前三周进行的全国预测仅比实际高峰晚一天,高出 11.6-13.3%,而我们预测的死亡率高峰比报告的早两天,高出 0.22-4.7%。我们以相对于完全幼稚人群的总体易感性降低百分比来跟踪先前感染和接种疫苗所产生的人群免疫力。截至 2022 年 10 月 1 日,我们估计美国人口对 BA.4/BA.5 变异株的总体易感性降低了 36.52%,其中 61.8%、15.06% 和 23.54% 的免疫力可归因于感染、初级系列疫苗接种和加强接种。我们回顾性地预测了从 2022 年 7 月 15 日开始扩大加强接种覆盖率的潜在影响,发现如果每周加强接种率提高五倍,到 2022 年 10 月 10 日,70% 的 65 岁以上人群将接种疫苗,并在 BA.4/BA.5 激增期间避免 25,000 例(95% CI:14,400-35,700 例)死亡。我们的模型为在日益复杂的变异体和疫苗环境中跟踪人群免疫力提供了一致的变量,并能对新型 COVID 变异体的出现和缓解的合理情景进行稳健的模拟。
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来源期刊
Epidemics
Epidemics INFECTIOUS DISEASES-
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
7.90%
发文量
92
审稿时长
140 days
期刊介绍: Epidemics publishes papers on infectious disease dynamics in the broadest sense. Its scope covers both within-host dynamics of infectious agents and dynamics at the population level, particularly the interaction between the two. Areas of emphasis include: spread, transmission, persistence, implications and population dynamics of infectious diseases; population and public health as well as policy aspects of control and prevention; dynamics at the individual level; interaction with the environment, ecology and evolution of infectious diseases, as well as population genetics of infectious agents.
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