作者
Mary-Ann Davies,Erna Morden,Petro Rosseau,Juanita Arendse,Jamy-Lee Bam,Linda Boloko,Keith Cloete,Cheryl Cohen,Nicole Chetty,Pierre Dane,Alexa Heekes,Nei-Yuan Hsiao,Mehreen Hunter,Hannah Hussey,Theuns Jacobs,Waasila Jassat,Saadiq Kariem,Reshma Kassanjee,Inneke Laenen,Sue Le Roux,Richard Lessells,Hassan Mahomed,Deborah Maughan,Graeme Meintjes,Marc Mendelson,Ayanda Mnguni,Melvin Moodley,Katy Murie,Jonathan Naude,Ntobeko A.B. Ntusi,Masudah Paleker,Arifa Parker,David Pienaar,Wolfgang Preiser,Hans Prozesky,Peter Raubenheimer,Liezel Rossouw,Neshaad Schrueder,Barry Smith,Mariette Smith,Wesley Solomon,Greg Symons,Jantjie Taljaard,Sean Wasserman,Robert J. Wilkinson,Milani Wolmarans,Nicole Wolter,Andrew Boulle
摘要
Abstract
Objective
We aimed to compare clinical severity of Omicron BA.4/BA.5 infection with BA.1 and earlier variant infections among laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 cases in the Western Cape, South Africa, using timing of infection to infer the lineage/variant causing infection. Methods
We included public sector patients aged ≥20 years with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 between 1-21 May 2022 (BA.4/BA.5 wave) and equivalent prior wave periods. We compared the risk between waves of (i) death and (ii) severe hospitalization/death (all within 21 days of diagnosis) using Cox regression adjusted for demographics, comorbidities, admission pressure, vaccination and prior infection. Results
Among 3,793 patients from the BA.4/BA.5 wave and 190,836 patients from previous waves the risk of severe hospitalization/death was similar in the BA.4/BA.5 and BA.1 waves (adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) 1.12; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.93; 1.34). Both Omicron waves had lower risk of severe outcomes than previous waves. Prior infection (aHR 0.29, 95% CI 0.24; 0.36) and vaccination (aHR 0.17; 95% CI 0.07; 0.40 for at least 3 doses vs. no vaccine) were protective. Conclusion
Disease severity was similar amongst diagnosed COVID-19 cases in the BA.4/BA.5 and BA.1 periods in the context of growing immunity against SARS-CoV-2 due to prior infection and vaccination, both of which were strongly protective.