Personalized vaccine strategies minimize deaths and case numbers in a Coronavirus wave of “Variants of Concern” when vaccine supply is limited, a modelling study from Switzerland predicts.
Younger persons, through more frequent social activities, contribute largely to driving a pandemic wave, but they also show a stronger immune response to vaccination and have a low risk of death. This raises the possibility that using a lower vaccine dose in the younger may allow vaccinating a much larger number of people rapidly.
A computer modelling study from the University Hospital of Basel and CLINAM Foundation, Switzerland, incorporated the coronavirus infection wave, a limited vaccine supply, age-dependent differences in social interaction, response to vaccination and disease risk, to predict evolution of waves of coronavirus infections and resulting deaths, as published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal.
“If a personalized, age-matched vaccination dose is used instead of the vaccination strategy currently used in most countries, these data promise a significant shortening of the wave of infections and a marked reduction in deaths and infection counts," says Prof. Patrick Hunziker from the University Hospital Basel, the lead author of this study.
Such a strategy can be immediately put into practice if backed by the regulatory body of a country and may be of particular value in countries that were not yet able to vaccinate a large proportion of their population because of limitations in vaccine availability or economic constraints.
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About CLINAM:
CLINAM, the European Foundation for Clinical Nanomedicine, is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the advancement of leading edge science to the benefit of patients and society.
Online: https://clinam.org
Scientific journal source (peer reviewed article):
Personalized-dose Covid-19 vaccination in a wave of virus Variants of Concern: Trading individual efficacy for societal benefit, Precis. Nanomed. 2021 September; 4(3):805-820, https://doi.org/10.33218/001c.26101