Letter
Author: Zhou, Tongqing ; Girard, Bethany ; Feng, Jing ; Aunins, Anne ; Lyke, Kirsten E. ; O’Dell, Sijy ; Schmidt, Stephen D. ; Sullivan, Nancy J. ; Tong, Jin ; Das, Rituparna ; Eaton, Amanda ; Doria-Rose, Nicole A. ; El Sahly, Hana ; Black, Walker P. ; Feng, Wenhong ; Montefiori, David C. ; Lai, Lilin ; Tang, Haili ; Ellis, Madison ; Manning, Kelly E. ; Atmar, Robert L. ; Edwards, Darin K. ; Posavad, Christine M. ; Zhang, Yi ; Maglinao, Maha ; Ledgerwood, Julie E. ; Pajon, Rolando ; Widge, Alicia ; McDanal, Charlene ; Gordon, Ingelise ; Floyd, Katharine ; Roberts, Paul C. ; Gaudinski, Martin R. ; Mascola, John R. ; Foster, Stephanie L. ; Chalkias, Spyros ; Misasi, John N. ; Wang, Lingshu ; Edara, Venkata-Viswanadh ; Moore, Kathryn M. ; Suthar, Mehul S. ; Shen, Xiaoying ; Baden, Lindsey R. ; Zhou, Honghong ; Korber, Bette ; Beigel, John H. ; Guech, Mercy
The highly transmissible omicron (B.1.1.529) variant of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is of mounting concern globally.In a pilot study, neutralization of the omicron variant after the primary two-dose regimen of the mRNA-1273 vaccine was lower than that of the D614G and beta variants but increased substantially after a booster dose of the mRNA-1273 vaccine.The 100-μg booster doses of the mRNA-1273, mRNA-1273.211, and mRNA-1273.213 vaccines all generated nearly identical ID 50 geometric mean titers against the omicron variant (range, 2115 to 2228); these titers were 2.5 to 2.6 times higher than those assessed after the 50-μg booster dose of the mRNA-1273 vaccine and 1.4 to 1.5 times higher than the peak titers against the D614G variant 1 mo after the second dose in the COVE trial.Together, these results showed that after the primary two-dose series of the mRNA-1273 vaccine, neutralization titers against the omicron variant were 35.0 times lower than those against the D614G variant.These lower titers could lead to an increased risk of severe breakthrough infection.The decline in neutralization of the omicron variant 6 mo after the booster injection was similar to the decline in neutralization titers against the D614G variant 7 mo after the second dose.The limitations of our study include small sample sets that may not ref lect neutralization in diverse populations, differences in the length of time before boosting among the groups, and a lack of post-boost efficacy data.These limitations may be addressed in further studies.