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Fourth dose bivalent COVID-19 vaccines outperform monovalent boosters in eliciting cross-reactive memory B cells to Omicron subvariants.

Fryer HA, Geers D, Gommers L, Zaeck LM, Tan NH, Jones-Freeman B, Goorhuis A, Postma DF, Visser LG, Hogarth PM, Koopmans MPG, GeurtsvanKessel CH, O'Hehir RE, van der Kuy PHM, de Vries RD, van Zelm MC

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  • Journal The Journal of infection

  • Published 08 Aug 2024

  • Volume 89

  • ISSUE 4

  • Pagination 106246

  • DOI 10.1016/j.jinf.2024.106246

Abstract

Bmem only detected in recipients of an mRNA vaccine for their primary dose. Thus, Omicron-based bivalent vaccines can significantly boost NAb and Bmem specific for ancestral WH1 and Omicron variants and improve recognition of descendent subvariants by pre-existing, WH1-specific Bmem beyond that of a monovalent vaccine. This provides new insights into the capacity of variant-based mRNA booster vaccines to improve immune memory against emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants and potentially protect against severe disease. ONE-SENTENCE SUMMARY: Omicron BA.1 and BA.5 bivalent COVID-19 boosters, used as a fourth dose, increase RBD-specific Bmem cross-recognition of Omicron subvariants, both those encoded by the vaccines and antigenically distinct subvariants, further than a monovalent booster.