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Booster Vaccination against COVID-19: Adaptation of Booster Vaccines against Omicron Variants Important for COVID-19 Protection

08 / 2023

  • Booster vaccinations serve to refresh the memory of the immune system and increase protection against infection and serious disease courses.
  • Currently circulating Omicron variants of SARS-CoV-2 differ significantly from the original variants in terms of immune system responsiveness (antigens).
  • Clinical study shows: mRNA vaccines not adapted to Omicron variants do not offer good levels of (antibody) protection against SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variants.
  • The adaptation of booster vaccines to Omicron variants is important for further protection against COVID-19 due to the continued dominance of Omicron coronavirus variants.

Quote Professor Eberhardt Hildt

Press Release

Booster vaccinations (3rd and 4th vaccinations) of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines that are not adapted to Omicron variants do lead to higher blood levels of neutralising antibodies against the Omicron subvariants. However, these antibody titres drop significantly six months after the third or fourth vaccination. The fourth vaccination also had no effect on the breadth of the immune response against different virus variants. Even with primary immunisation with Comirnaty, only small amounts of neutralising antibodies against Omicron were present. These are the results of a clinical study conducted by the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut in vaccinated healthcare professionals.

COVID-19 Vaccines (Source: MPhoto/Shutterstock.com)

Booster Vaccination to Strengthen Immunological Memory

Booster shots are recommended in most age groups to protect against COVID-19. Boosters are administered for several reasons: antibody titres rise rapidly within the first two weeks after a booster vaccination and offer the best protection against COVID-19. The antibody titre then drops to a baseline level after the first few months. This baseline level is built up or refreshed by the immunological memory, resulting in an increase in memory B cells and long-lived plasma cells, which in turn form antibodies. Both cell types are important pillars of the antibody-based humoral immune response. Booster vaccination also stimulates a broader humoral immune response, which is produced by differentiation processes of the antibody genes (somatic hypermutation) and antibody affinity maturation.

SARS-CoV-2 Omicron Variants Necessitate Vaccine Adaptations

Omicron subvariants of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus have dominated since the beginning of 2022. The Omicron subvariants have an enormous escape potential due to the destruction or deletion of different areas of the virus that are important for the immune response (epitopes). As a result, the corresponding virus variants evade the immune response. This escape potential also explains why the number of breakthrough infections in vaccinated individuals has increased significantly since the occurrence of the Omicron subvariants: Due to the numerous mutations in the spike protein, many of the antibodies induced by vaccination and/or infection cannot bind to the mutated spike protein and thus do not develop their neutralising potential.

Clinical Study Shows: Non-Omicron Adapted COVID-19 Vaccines Don't Provide Continued High Antibody Levels Against Omicron Variants

A research team at the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut led by Professor Eberhard Hildt, head of the Virology Division, investigated the influence of the original mRNA vaccines Comirnaty (BioNTech) and Spikevax (Moderna), which had not yet been adapted to the Omicron variants, on the levels of protection against Omicron variants offered by neutralising antibodies in a clinical study. After primary immunisation (Comirnaty), the subjects had low blood levels (titres) of neutralising antibodies to Omicron. Booster vaccinations (3rd and 4th vaccinations) with the monovalent mRNA vaccine Spikevax, also not yet adapted to Omicron variants at the time, did lead to higher titres of neutralising antibodies against the Omicron variants. However, the antibody titres also dropped six months after the fourth vaccination (2nd booster vaccination) – just as they did after the third vaccination. The fourth vaccination also had no effect on the breadth of the antibody-based immune response, which gives an indication of the extent to which there is protection against infection with various virus variants.

The results of this study also point to the importance of the COVID-19 booster vaccines adapted to Omicron subvariants.

The Standing Committee on Vaccination (STIKO) recommends Omicron subvariant-adapted mRNA vaccines against COVID-19 for booster vaccinations.

Science Reports reports on the results in detail:

Hein S, Sabino C, Benz NI, Görgülü E, Maier TJ, Oberle D, Hildt E (2023): The fourth vaccination with a non-SARS-CoV-2 variant adapted vaccine fails to increase the breadth of the humoral immune response.
Sci Rep 13: 10820.
Text

Updated: 20.07.2023