Rapid decline in vaccine-boosted neutralizing antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant.

Journal: Cell Reports. Medicine
Published:
Abstract

The Omicron variant of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) exhibits reduced susceptibility to vaccine-induced neutralizing antibodies, requiring a boost to generate protective immunity. We assess the magnitude and short-term durability of neutralizing antibodies after homologous and heterologous boosting with mRNA and Ad26.COV2.S vaccines. All prime-boost combinations substantially increase the neutralization titers to Omicron, although the boosted titers decline rapidly within 2 months from the peak response compared with boosted titers against the prototypic D614G variant. Boosted Omicron neutralization titers are substantially higher for homologous mRNA vaccine boosting, and for heterologous mRNA and Ad26.COV2.S vaccine boosting, compared with homologous Ad26.COV2.S boosting. Homologous mRNA vaccine boosting generates nearly equivalent neutralizing activity against Omicron sublineages BA.1, BA.2, and BA.3 but modestly reduced neutralizing activity against BA.2.12.1 and BA.4/BA.5 compared with BA.1. These results have implications for boosting requirements to protect against Omicron and future variants of SARS-CoV-2. This trial was conducted under ClincalTrials.gov: NCT04889209.

Authors
Kirsten Lyke, Robert Atmar, Clara Islas, Christine Posavad, Daniel Szydlo, Rahul Paul Chourdhury, Meagan Deming, Amanda Eaton, Lisa Jackson, Angela Branche, Hana El Sahly, Christina Rostad, Judith Martin, Christine Johnston, Richard Rupp, Mark Mulligan, Rebecca Brady, Robert Frenck, Martín Bäcker, Angelica Kottkamp, Tara Babu, Kumaravel Rajakumar, Srilatha Edupuganti, David Dobrzynski, Rhea Coler, Janet Archer, Sonja Crandon, Jillian Zemanek, Elizabeth Brown, Kathleen Neuzil, David Stephens, Diane Post, Seema Nayak, Mehul Suthar, Paul Roberts, John Beigel, David Montefiori