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Clinical characteristics and immune profile alterations in vaccinated individuals with breakthrough Delta SARS-CoV-2 infections

Author

Listed:
  • Qinghong Fan

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Jingrong Shi

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Yanhong Yang

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Guofang Tang

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Mengling Jiang

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Jiaojiao Li

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Jingyan Tang

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Lu Li

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Xueliang Wen

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Lieguang Zhang

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Xizi Deng

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Yaping Wang

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Yun Lan

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Liya Li

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Ping Peng

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Yuwei Tong

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Huan Lu

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Lili Yan

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Ying Liu

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Shuijiang Cai

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Yueping Li

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Xiaoneng Mo

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Meiyu Li

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Xilong Deng

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Zhongwei Hu

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Haisheng Yu

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Fengyu Hu

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Jinxin Liu

    (Guangzhou Medical University)

  • Xiaoping Tang

    (Guangzhou Medical University
    Bio-Island)

  • Feng Li

    (Guangzhou Medical University
    Bio-Island)

Abstract

Despite timely immunization programs, and efficacious vaccines conveying protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection, breakthrough infections in vaccinated individuals have been reported. The Delta variant of concern (VOC) outbreak in Guangzhou resulted in local transmission in vaccinated and non-vaccinated residents, providing a unique opportunity to study the protective effects of the inactivated vaccines in breakthrough infection. Here, we find that the 2-dose vaccinated group has similar peak viral titers and comparable speeds of viral RNA clearance to the non-vaccinated group but accelerated viral suppression in the middle course of the disease. We quantitatively demonstrate that peak viral pneumonia is significantly mitigated in the 2-dose vaccine group (median 0.298%) compared with the non-vaccinated (5.77%) and 1-dose vaccine (3.34%) groups. Pneumonia absorbance is approximately 6 days ahead in the 2-dose group (median 10 days) than in the non-vaccinated group (16 days) (p = 0.003). We also observe reduced cytokine inflammation and markedly undisturbed gene transcription profiles of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in the 2-dose group. In short, our study demonstrates that prior vaccination substantially restrains pneumonia development, reduces cytokine storms, and facilitates clinical recovery.

Suggested Citation

  • Qinghong Fan & Jingrong Shi & Yanhong Yang & Guofang Tang & Mengling Jiang & Jiaojiao Li & Jingyan Tang & Lu Li & Xueliang Wen & Lieguang Zhang & Xizi Deng & Yaping Wang & Yun Lan & Liya Li & Ping Pen, 2022. "Clinical characteristics and immune profile alterations in vaccinated individuals with breakthrough Delta SARS-CoV-2 infections," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 13(1), pages 1-12, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:13:y:2022:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-022-31693-7
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-31693-7
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    References listed on IDEAS

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