While COVID-19 boosters have been found to protect against infection, hospitalization, and severe illness, the waning of their protection has led to uncertainty about when it is most appropriate to get an additional booster shot.
Now, a team of scientists led by faculty at the Yale School of Public Health and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte has an answer: Updated boosters administered on an annual or biannual basis greatly reduce the long-term risk of infection from endemic COVID-19.
Not getting an updated booster shot, they found, triples the risk of future infection compared with annual boosting.
The study, published in the Journal of Medical Virology, is the first to quantify the long-term likelihood of future infection following boosting by updated Moderna or Pfizer vaccines.
“The risk of future infection is strongly linked to the timing of boosting,” said lead author Jeffrey Townsend, Elihu Professor of Biostatistics at Yale School of Public Health and Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology with Yale’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences. “Waiting one and a half years nearly doubles the long-term risk of infection compared to boosting annually.”
Protection against infection requires boosting with updated vaccines that are equipped to counter changes in the virus that occur as part of its natural evolution over time, the researchers said.