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University of Nebraska Medical Center

Household COVID Omicron spread lower among vaccinated, study finds

CIDRAP

An analysis during the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant wave in Japan suggests a lower rate of in-home COVID-19 transmission when the index (primary) patient or contact were fully vaccinated against COVID—and no transmission when both parties were fully vaccinated.

The study was published late last week in the International Journal of Infectious Diseases.

Higher Omicron secondary attack risk

For the Vaccine Effectiveness, Networking, and University Safety (VENUS) study, Kyushu University researchers analyzed data on COVID-19 vaccination and infections and a resident registry in two municipalities in Japan and modeled the effect of vaccination on transmission.

The evaluation included 7,326 households with a member infected by SARS-CoV-2 from January to April 2022 and 17,586 contacts. Households were categorized by whether they included children 11 years and younger, with 2,702 having children in that age-group (household group 1) and 4,624 with older children (household group 2).

Full vaccination was considered three COVID-19 vaccine doses, with the third dose given at least 7 days earlier. All others were classified as unvaccinated, including recipients of one dose (0.9%), two doses (43.9%), and three doses, with the last dose given less than 7 days earlier (22.2%). 

“The Omicron variant and its subvariants have demonstrated a higher household secondary attack risk (SAR) than the previously dominant B.1.617.2 (Delta) variant, which indicates the need for more effective measures to reduce the formation of household clusters,” the authors wrote.

No infections when both parties vaccinated

The percentage of household contacts infected via an index patient was 24.3% in all households, 35.0% in household group 1 and 15.4% in household group 2. Of all households, participants with older children accounted for 74.4% of index patients.

In household group 1, younger children made up 56.3% of index patients. Among all households, symptom onset in secondary patients occurred within 2 or 3 days of the index case.

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