Background: Mass basic and booster immunization programs effectively contained the spread of the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) virus, also known as COVID-19. However, the emerging Variants of Concern (VOCs) of COVID-19 evade the immune protection of the vaccine and increase the risk of reinfection. Methods: Serum antibodies of 384 COVID-19 cases recovered from SARS-CoV-2 infection were examined. Correlations between clinical symptoms and antibodies against VOCs were analyzed. Result: All 384 cases (aged 43, range 1–90) were from 15 cities of Guangdong, China. The specific IgA, IgG, and IgM antibodies could be detected within 4-6 weeks after infection. A broad cross-reaction between SARS-CoV-2 and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus, but not with Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus was found. The titers of neutralization antibodies (NAbs) were significantly correlated with IgG (r = 0.667, p < 0.001), but showed poor neutralizing effects against VOCs. Age, fever, and hormone therapy were independent risk factors for NAbs titers reduction against VOCs. Conclusion: Humoral immunity antibodies from the original strain of COVID-19 showed weak neutralization effects against VOCs, and decreased neutralizing ability was associated with initial age, fever, and hormone therapy, which hindered the effects of the COVID-19 vaccine developed from the SARS-CoV-2 prototype virus.
Vaccination is the key to prevent varicella zoster virus (VZV) infection in children. Voluntary and self-funded strategies have led to variable vaccination rates against VZV in China. For low-income populations, in particular, the effects of VZV vaccination have been insufficiently estimated. Community-based serosurveillance was conducted in two less developed regions, Zhanjiang and Heyuan, of Guangdong, China. Anti-VZV IgG antibodies in serum were detected by ELISA. The vaccination data were derived from the Guangdong Immune Planning Information System. A total of 4221 participants were involved, of which 3377 were from three counties of Zhanjiang and the other 844 were from one county of Heyuan, Guangdong, China. The total VZV IgG seropositivity rate in vaccinated individuals was 34.30% and 42.76%, while it was 89.61% and 91.62% in non-vaccinated populations of Zhanjiang and Heyuan, respectively. The seropositivity rate increased gradually with age, reaching ~90% in the >20- to 30-year-old group. The VarV vaccination rates of children aged 1–14 years were 60.47% for one dose and 6.20% for two doses in Zhanjiang, and 52.24% for one dose and 4.48% for two doses in Heyuan. Compared with the non-vaccinated group (31.19%) and one-dose group (35.47%), the positivity rate of anti-VZV IgG antibodies was significantly higher in the two-dose group (67.86%). Before the VarV policy was reformed, the anti-VZV IgG positivity rate was 27.85% in the one-dose-vaccinated participants, which increased to 30.43% after October 2017. The high seroprevalence in participants was due to infection of VZV in Zhanjiang and Heyuan, not vaccination against VZV. Children aged 0–5 years are still vulnerable to varicella, so a two-dose vaccination program should be implemented to prevent onward transmission of VZV.
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