@article{381, author = {Chadi Saad-Roy and Sinead Morris and Jessica Metcalf and Michael Mina and Rachel Baker and Jeremy Farrar and Edward Holmes and Oliver Pybus and Andrea Graham and Simon Levin and Bryan Grenfell and Caroline Wagner}, title = {Epidemiological and evolutionary considerations of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine dosing regimes.}, abstract = {
Given vaccine dose shortages and logistical challenges, various deployment strategies are being proposed to increase population immunity levels to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Two critical issues arise: How timing of delivery of the second dose will affect infection dynamics and how it will affect prospects for the evolution of viral immune escape via a buildup of partially immune individuals. Both hinge on the robustness of the immune response elicited by a single dose as compared with natural and two-dose immunity. Building on an existing immuno-epidemiological model, we find that in the short term, focusing on one dose generally decreases infections, but that longer-term outcomes depend on this relative immune robustness. We then explore three scenarios of selection and find that a one-dose policy may increase the potential for antigenic evolution under certain conditions of partial population immunity. We highlight the critical need to test viral loads and quantify immune responses after one vaccine dose and to ramp up vaccination efforts globally.
}, year = {2021}, journal = {Science (New York, N.Y.)}, volume = {372}, pages = {363-370}, month = {04/2021}, issn = {1095-9203}, doi = {10.1126/science.abg8663}, language = {eng}, }