Abstract

SummaryBackgroundThe UK COVID-19 vaccination programme has prioritised vaccination of those at the highest risk of COVID-19 mortality and hospitalisation. The programme was rolled out in Scotland during winter 2020–21, when SARS-CoV-2 infection rates were at their highest since the pandemic started, despite social distancing measures being in place. We aimed to estimate the frequency of COVID-19 hospitalisation or death in people who received at least one vaccine dose and characterise these individuals.MethodsWe conducted a prospective cohort study using the Early Pandemic Evaluation and Enhanced Surveillance of COVID-19 (EAVE II) national surveillance platform, which contained linked vaccination, primary care, RT-PCR testing, hospitalisation, and mortality records for 5·4 million people (around 99% of the population) in Scotland. Individuals were followed up from receiving their first dose of the BNT162b2 (Pfizer–BioNTech) or ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 (Oxford–AstraZeneca) COVID-19 vaccines until admission to hospital for COVID-19, death, or the end of the study period on April 18, 2021. We used a time-dependent Poisson regression model to estimate rate ratios (RRs) for demographic and clinical factors associated with COVID-19 hospitalisation or death 14 days or more after the first vaccine dose, stratified by vaccine type.FindingsBetween Dec 8, 2020, and April 18, 2021, 2 572 008 individuals received their first dose of vaccine—841 090 (32·7%) received BNT162b2 and 1 730 918 (67·3%) received ChAdOx1. 1196 (<0·1%) individuals were admitted to hospital or died due to COVID-19 illness (883 hospitalised, of whom 228 died, and 313 who died due to COVID-19 without hospitalisation) 14 days or more after their first vaccine dose. These severe COVID-19 outcomes were associated with older age (≥80 years vs 18–64 years adjusted RR 4·75, 95% CI 3·85–5·87), comorbidities (five or more risk groups vs less than five risk groups 4·24, 3·34–5·39), hospitalisation in the previous 4 weeks (3·00, 2·47–3·65), high-risk occupations (ten or more previous COVID-19 tests vs less than ten previous COVID-19 tests 2·14, 1·62–2·81), care home residence (1·63, 1·32–2·02), socioeconomic deprivation (most deprived quintile vs least deprived quintile 1·57, 1·30–1·90), being male (1·27, 1·13–1·43), and being an ex-smoker (ex-smoker vs non-smoker 1·18, 1·01–1·38). A history of COVID-19 before vaccination was protective (0·40, 0·29–0·54).InterpretationCOVID-19 hospitalisations and deaths were uncommon 14 days or more after the first vaccine dose in this national analysis in the context of a high background incidence of SARS-CoV-2 infection and with extensive social distancing measures in place. Sociodemographic and clinical features known to increase the risk of severe disease in unvaccinated populations were also associated with severe outcomes in people receiving their first dose of vaccine and could help inform case management and future vaccine policy formulation.FundingUK Research and Innovation (Medical Research Council), Research and Innovation Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund, Scottish Government, and Health Data Research UK.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in over 220 million cases and 4·6 million deaths worldwide as of September, 2021, leading to large-scale disruption of societies

  • Public Health England reported that 9% of people aged 80 years or older who tested positive for COVID-19 after a first dose of BNT162b2 vaccine and 7% of people who received a first dose of the ChAdOx1 (Oxford–AstraZeneca) vaccine were subsequently admitted to hospital for COVID-19

  • Data on all individuals from 940 general practices across Scotland were deterministically linked to data on SARS-CoV-2 testing, the vaccination programme, hospital admissions, and mortality records using the Community Health Index number, which is a unique identifier used in all health-care contacts across Scotland

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Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in over 220 million cases and 4·6 million deaths worldwide as of September, 2021, leading to large-scale disruption of societies. A study in Israel on 596 618 individuals who received the BNT162b2 (Pfizer–BioNTech) vaccine reported that 110 vaccinated individuals were admitted to hospital and there were nine deaths due to COVID-19 up to 42 days after vaccination. Public Health England reported that 9% of people aged 80 years or older who tested positive for COVID-19 after a first dose of BNT162b2 vaccine and 7% of people who received a first dose of the ChAdOx1 (Oxford–AstraZeneca) vaccine were subsequently admitted to hospital for COVID-19. A separate report of the ISARIC/CO-CIN study in the UK reported that, since the start of the vaccination programme, one in 25 people admitted to hospital for COVID-19 had received at least one vaccine dose. Of the 42 788 people recruited to this study since Dec 8, 2020, 4·2% had been vaccinated (1685 with one dose and 27 with two doses), with a median time from vaccination to admission to hospital of 10 days

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