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Contribution of low population immunity to the severe Omicron BA.2 outbreak in Hong Kong.

Lin-Lei ChenSyed Muhammad Umer AbdullahWan-Mui ChanBrian Pui-Chun ChanJonathan Daniel IpAllen Wing-Ho ChuLu LuXiaojuan ZhangYan ZhaoVivien Wai-Man ChuangAlbert Ka-Wing AuVincent Chi-Chung ChengSiddharth SridharKwok-Yung YuenIvan Fan-Ngai HungKwok-Hung ChanKelvin Kai Wang To
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Monitoring population protective immunity against SARS-CoV-2 variants is critical for risk assessment. We hypothesize that Hong Kong's explosive Omicron BA.2 outbreak in early 2022 could be explained by low herd immunity. Our seroprevalence study using sera collected from January to December 2021 shows a very low prevalence of neutralizing antibodies (NAb) against ancestral virus among older adults. The age group-specific prevalence of NAb generally correlates with the vaccination uptake rate, but older adults have a much lower NAb seropositive rate than vaccination uptake rate. For all age groups, the seroprevalence of NAb against Omicron variant is much lower than that against the ancestral virus. Our study suggests that this BA.2 outbreak and the exceptionally high case-fatality rate in the ≥80 year-old age group (9.2%) could be attributed to the lack of protective immunity in the population, especially among the vulnerable older adults, and that ongoing sero-surveillance is essential.
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