UK-wide COVID-19 vaccine study reports long-term third dose booster protection

 Third dose COVID-19 booster vaccines offer lasting protection after several months, according to the latest results of a nationwide trial.

NIHR Cambridge CRF is taking part in The COV-BOOST study, led by University Hospital Southampton, which has provided data to underpin the UK’s booster programmes since 2021.

New analysis, published online in the Journal of Infection, is reporting immune responses eight months after third doses of several COVID-19 vaccines.

The insight could be important around the globe if longer-term protection becomes a higher priority when choosing vaccines for booster programmes.

Researchers found adenovirus-based vaccines (such as Janssen or Oxford-AstraZeneca) may lead to similar immune responses as mRNA vaccines (such as Moderna or Pfizer-BioNTech) at around seven months after the third dose of vaccine. They also report that lower doses of mRNA vaccines may offer lasting protection as boosters.

Booster study

COV-BOOST provided the world’s first data on the safety and immunogenicity of a third dose in mix and match schedules.

It compared immune response to seven vaccines 28 days after use as a third dose in people who had received two initial doses of either the AstraZeneca or Pfizer vaccines.

Last year, the study reported strong immune responses were seen 84 days after third jabs in several approved COVID-19 vaccines.

A fourth dose sub-study also found that an mRNA vaccine is safe and boosts antibody levels – even higher than that of a third dose.

Longer-lasting immunity

Third and fourth doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been offered to people considered vulnerable or at higher risk in the UK.

Professor Saul Faust, trial lead and Director of the NIHR Southampton Clinical Research Facility, said:

“The rapid development and delivery of COVID-19 vaccines has been vital to forging a path out of the pandemic. Looking to the future, vaccines that provide longer-lasting immunity may now be preferred to those that need to be given at shorter intervals. Different doses may be an option depending on the duration of immune response.

“This further data, taken over 240 days after third doses, will support global policymaking on the choice of future boosters and inform manufacturing.”

UK-wide research effort

The seven vaccines trialled in the main COV-BOOST trial were:

  • AstraZeneca (Oxford-AstraZeneca)
  • Pfizer (Pfizer-BioNTech)
  • Moderna
  • Novavax
  • Valneva
  • Janssen
  • CureVac (first-generation vaccine no longer in clinical development)

The trial initially included ten experimental vaccine arms (seven full-dose, three half-dose) delivered at three groups of six sites.

The latest report analyses the responses to third doses of the original (wild type) vaccines from 817 participants in seven study arms.

The current mRNA vaccines recommended by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) are bivalent vaccines that have been upgraded to target two circulating variants of COVID-19. This study used wild-type mRNA vaccines that targeted the original strain of COVID-19 and therefore cannot be directly compared to the vaccines used in more recent campaigns.

COV-BOOST is led by University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust and delivered by a network of trial sites across the UK. The study is funded by the former Vaccine Taskforce (now the COVID Vaccine Unit in the UK Health Security Agency) and the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR).

Delivery partners are Oxford Vaccine Group (University of Oxford), Imperial College London Clinical Trials Unit, PHARMExcel Ltd and the NIHR Clinical Research Network.

Reference

X. Liu et al., Persistence of immune responses after heterologous and homologous third COVID-19 vaccine dose schedules in the UK: eight-month analyses of the COV-BOOST trial. The Journal of Infection (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.jinf.2023.04.012

Adapted from University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust press release.