Estimated number of lives directly saved by COVID-19 vaccination programmes in the WHO European Region from December, 2020, to March, 2023: a retrospective surveillance study.
Journal
The Lancet. Respiratory medicine
ISSN: 2213-2619
Titre abrégé: Lancet Respir Med
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101605555
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
07 Aug 2024
07 Aug 2024
Historique:
received:
26
01
2024
revised:
14
05
2024
accepted:
24
05
2024
medline:
11
8
2024
pubmed:
11
8
2024
entrez:
10
8
2024
Statut:
aheadofprint
Résumé
By March, 2023, 54 countries, areas, and territories (hereafter CAT) in the WHO European Region had reported more than 2·2 million COVID-19-related deaths to the WHO Regional Office for Europe. Here, we estimated how many lives were directly saved by vaccinating adults in the WHO European Region from December, 2020, to March, 2023. In this retrospective surveillance study, we estimated the number of lives directly saved by age group, vaccine dose, and circulating variant-of-concern (VOC) period, regionally and nationally, using weekly data on COVID-19 mortality and infection, COVID-19 vaccination uptake, and SARS-CoV-2 virus characterisations by lineage downloaded from The European Surveillance System on June 11, 2023, as well as vaccine effectiveness data from the literature. We included data for six age groups (25-49 years, 50-59 years, ≥60 years, 60-69 years, 70-79 years, and ≥80 years). To be included in the analysis, CAT needed to have reported both COVID-19 vaccination and mortality data for at least one of the four older age groups. Only CAT that reported weekly data for both COVID-19 vaccination and mortality by age group for 90% of study weeks or more in the full study period were included. We calculated the percentage reduction in the number of expected and reported deaths. Between December, 2020, and March, 2023, in 34 of 54 CAT included in the analysis, COVID-19 vaccines reduced deaths by 59% overall (CAT range 17-82%), representing approximately 1·6 million lives saved (range 1·5-1·7 million) in those aged 25 years or older: 96% of lives saved were aged 60 years or older and 52% were aged 80 years or older; first boosters saved 51% of lives, and 60% were saved during the Omicron period. Over nearly 2·5 years, most lives saved by COVID-19 vaccination were in older adults by first booster dose and during the Omicron period, reinforcing the importance of up-to-date vaccination among the most at-risk individuals. Further modelling work should evaluate indirect effects of vaccination and public health and social measures. US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
By March, 2023, 54 countries, areas, and territories (hereafter CAT) in the WHO European Region had reported more than 2·2 million COVID-19-related deaths to the WHO Regional Office for Europe. Here, we estimated how many lives were directly saved by vaccinating adults in the WHO European Region from December, 2020, to March, 2023.
METHODS
METHODS
In this retrospective surveillance study, we estimated the number of lives directly saved by age group, vaccine dose, and circulating variant-of-concern (VOC) period, regionally and nationally, using weekly data on COVID-19 mortality and infection, COVID-19 vaccination uptake, and SARS-CoV-2 virus characterisations by lineage downloaded from The European Surveillance System on June 11, 2023, as well as vaccine effectiveness data from the literature. We included data for six age groups (25-49 years, 50-59 years, ≥60 years, 60-69 years, 70-79 years, and ≥80 years). To be included in the analysis, CAT needed to have reported both COVID-19 vaccination and mortality data for at least one of the four older age groups. Only CAT that reported weekly data for both COVID-19 vaccination and mortality by age group for 90% of study weeks or more in the full study period were included. We calculated the percentage reduction in the number of expected and reported deaths.
FINDINGS
RESULTS
Between December, 2020, and March, 2023, in 34 of 54 CAT included in the analysis, COVID-19 vaccines reduced deaths by 59% overall (CAT range 17-82%), representing approximately 1·6 million lives saved (range 1·5-1·7 million) in those aged 25 years or older: 96% of lives saved were aged 60 years or older and 52% were aged 80 years or older; first boosters saved 51% of lives, and 60% were saved during the Omicron period.
INTERPRETATION
CONCLUSIONS
Over nearly 2·5 years, most lives saved by COVID-19 vaccination were in older adults by first booster dose and during the Omicron period, reinforcing the importance of up-to-date vaccination among the most at-risk individuals. Further modelling work should evaluate indirect effects of vaccination and public health and social measures.
FUNDING
BACKGROUND
US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Identifiants
pubmed: 39127051
pii: S2213-2600(24)00179-6
doi: 10.1016/S2213-2600(24)00179-6
pii:
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Investigateurs
Margaux Mi Mesle
(MM)
Jeremy Brown
(J)
Piers Mook
(P)
Mark A Katz
(MA)
Jose Hagan
(J)
Roberta Pastore
(R)
Bernhard Benka
(B)
Monika Redlberger-Fritz
(M)
Nathalie Bossuyt
(N)
Veerle Stouten
(V)
Catharina Vernemmen
(C)
Elisabet Constantinou
(E)
Jan Kynčl
(J)
Marek Maly
(M)
Ondrej Sanca
(O)
Tyra Grove Krause
(TG)
Lasse Skafte Vestergaard
(LS)
Tuija Leino
(T)
Eero Poukka
(E)
Kassiani Gkolfinopoulou
(K)
Kassiani Mellou
(K)
Maria Tsintziloni
(M)
Zsuzsanna Molnár
(Z)
Gudrun Aspelund
(G)
Marianna Thordardottir
(M)
Lisa Domegan
(L)
Eva Kelly
(E)
Joan O'Donell
(J)
Chiara Sacco
(C)
Flavia Riccardo
(F)
Alberto Mateo Urdiales
(AM)
Viktoras Bumšteinas
(V)
Rasa Liausediene
(R)
Joël Mossong
(J)
Anne Vergison
(A)
Maria-Louise Borg
(ML)
Tanya Melillo
(T)
Dragan Kocinski
(D)
Enkela Pollozhani
(E)
Hinta Meijerink
(H)
Diana Costa
(D)
João Paulo Gomes
(JP)
Pedro Pinto Leite
(PP)
Alina Druc
(A)
Veaceslav Gutu
(V)
Valentin Mita
(V)
Mihaela Lazar
(M)
Rodica Popescu
(R)
Odette Popovici
(O)
Monika Musilová
(M)
Maja Mrzel
(M)
Maja Socan
(M)
Veronika Učakar
(V)
Aurora Limia
(A)
Clara Mazagatos
(C)
Carmen Olmedo
(C)
Gavin Dabrera
(G)
Meaghan Kall
(M)
Mary Sinnathamby
(M)
Jim McMenamin
(J)
Graham McGowan
(G)
Kirsty Morrison
(K)
Dorit Nitzan
(D)
Marc-Alain Widdowson
(MA)
Catherine Smallwood
(C)
Richard Pebody
(R)
Informations de copyright
© 2024 World Health Organization. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts
Declaration of interests GD reports that the predecessor of the organisation he works for, Public Health England, received an unrestricted grant from GSK to undertake a study on the outcome of patients who received parenteral zanamavir. The funder received data and interim reports from Public Health England but did not influence analysis and reporting of the study. GD had no involvement in the GSK-funded study on parenteral zanamavir. Furthermore, the currently submitted work was part of the public health response activities to COVID-19 and had no relationship to GSK or the study on parenteral zanamivir. EP has received a personal grant from the Finnish Medical Foundation for PhD studies. JM declares that Public Health Scotland received funding from the EU Horizon 2020 programme for work in describing the epidemiology of COVID-19 and its impact on primary and secondary care as a partner in the IMOVE-COVID-19 project. MK declares having received consulting fees from Gilead Sciences for advising on development of a clinical module for collection of patient-reported outcome data from people living with HIV, and having received an honoraria from GESIDA for speaking at an annual conference on patient-reported outcome measures for people with HIV. All other authors declare no competing interests.