Survey finds breakthrough COVID-19 cases occur in 7.5% of vaccinated Texans

vaccine
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Breakthrough COVID-19 infections after vaccination occurred in 7.5% of Texans surveyed and were linked to Hispanic ethnicity, larger household size, rural versus urban living, type of vaccination, and multiple comorbidities, according to findings from UTHealth Houston School of Public Health published today in the Journal of Infectious Diseases.

The data were collected from December 2020 to June 2022 through the Texas Coronavirus Antibody Response Survey (CARES), and showed that the incidence of breakthrough infections spiked as immunity likely waned and newer variants emerged. This information points to the ongoing need for vaccine updating and monitoring the longevity of immunity of vaccinated individuals across variants, according to the researchers.

“The arrival of new variants has likely resulted in reduced effectiveness of primary series vaccination,” said Stacia DeSantis, Ph.D., corresponding author of the paper and professor of biostatistics at the UTHealth Houston School of Public Health. “If we were to analyze today’s data, which is five to six months more of data, I certainly expect a higher percentage of breakthrough than we saw as of June 2022.”

Michael D. Swartz, Ph.D., associate professor and vice chairman of the Department of Biostatistics at the school, was senior author of the paper.

Researchers examined self-reported data from 22,575 people over the age of 20 who were enrolled in the Texas CARES survey, an ongoing prospective population-based seroprevalence project designed to assess – and vaccine-induced antibody status over time among a volunteer population throughout Texas. Enrollment began in October 2020.

Of the 1,700 participants who self-reported breakthrough infections of the virus, 112 participants, or 6.5%, experienced severe outcomes that resulted in hospitalization. Breakthrough infections were more frequent when the Omicron variant was dominant. Most predictors of breakthrough infections were also predictors of severe infections requiring hospitalization.

Hispanic participants reported a higher incidence of breakthrough cases and severe outcomes, which mirrors what has been reported in overall COVID-19 cases in literature, and signifies the disproportionate burden of the virus in the Hispanic population.

“Those of Hispanic ethnicity had statistically significant higher odds of breakthrough infection in a fully adjusted analysis, and statistically significant higher odds of severe breakthrough in the age-adjusted analysis,” DeSantis said. “In raw numbers, 9.8% of Hispanic participants had a breakthrough infection versus, for example, 7.4% of non-Hispanic white participants and 8.3% of Black participants. The breakthrough percentage may seem close, but since the sample size is large, the difference is significant.”

One rationale for the higher incidence in Hispanics might be that multigenerational households are not uncommon among the Texas Hispanic population, according to researchers. Household members, including older people who often have more comorbidities, may have been at higher risk for infection from younger, working-age generations.

DeSantis said the link to a in rural settings versus urban settings might be related to different industries.

“The potential lack of ability of rural participants to work from home may have influenced preventive measures during high transmission periods,” she said. “Also, less access to —including vaccine and booster scheduling in rural areas—is a known issue. The rural population also tends to be less insured. All of these sociodemographic factors contribute to rural versus urban disparities.”

Among vaccines, researchers found that there were significantly elevated odds of breakthrough infections in those receiving Pfizer or Johnson & Johnson versus Moderna. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine was linked to the highest number of breakthrough infections.

Analysis showed that care employees also had higher reports of breakthrough infections. “Working in health care is an obvious exposure and so are the jobs that require daily face-to-face interactions,” DeSantis said.

Comorbidities such as asthma, obesity and hypertension were identified as risk factors for a severe level of breakthrough infections, which resulted in an ER visit or hospitalization. Availability of a well-established running list of medical conditions could assist in advising patients and delivery of care management over time to those most at risk, according to the study.

More information:
Stacia M DeSantis et al, Incidence and predictors of breakthrough and severe breakthrough infections of SARS-CoV-2 after primary series vaccination in adults: A population-based survey of 22,575 participants, Journal of Infectious Diseases (2023). DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiad020

Citation:
Survey finds breakthrough COVID-19 cases occur in 7.5% of vaccinated Texans (2023, February 2)
retrieved 3 February 2023
from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-02-survey-breakthrough-covid-cases-vaccinated.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Read More
Raleigh Mote

Latest

The Truth About Red Light Therapy Masks, According to a Dermatologist

You don't have permission to access "http://www.medpagetoday.com/popmedicine/cultureclinic/120805" on this server. Reference #18.9751c317.1776352333.14d1e5c https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.9751c317.1776352333.14d1e5c

Do Stabilisation Admissions Support Eating Disorder Care?

TOPLINE: Among children and young individuals (aged 0-18 years) admitted for medical stabilisation of restrictive eating disorders, more than half continued their recovery through outpatient care; however, a notable proportion were medically unstable on admission, and many required nutritional support. METHODOLOGY: Researchers conducted a retrospective cohort analysis to evaluate outcomes of medical stabilisation admissions in

‘Not your parents’ cannabis:’ Legalization lights up innovation—but not clinical research

🛡️ Just a quick check We’re checking your connection to prevent automated abuse

NFL Analyst Raises Red Flags Over Arvell Reese’s Fit As Edge Rusher on PFSN’s Football Debate Club

As the 2026 NFL Draft approaches, few defensive prospects have generated as much intrigue as Ohio State’s Arvell Reese. Widely viewed as one of the most talented defenders in the class, Reese’s versatility has made him a standout on scouting boards. However, with that versatility comes an ongoing debate about how he projects at the

Newsletter

Don't miss

The Truth About Red Light Therapy Masks, According to a Dermatologist

You don't have permission to access "http://www.medpagetoday.com/popmedicine/cultureclinic/120805" on this server. Reference #18.9751c317.1776352333.14d1e5c https://errors.edgesuite.net/18.9751c317.1776352333.14d1e5c

Do Stabilisation Admissions Support Eating Disorder Care?

TOPLINE: Among children and young individuals (aged 0-18 years) admitted for medical stabilisation of restrictive eating disorders, more than half continued their recovery through outpatient care; however, a notable proportion were medically unstable on admission, and many required nutritional support. METHODOLOGY: Researchers conducted a retrospective cohort analysis to evaluate outcomes of medical stabilisation admissions in

‘Not your parents’ cannabis:’ Legalization lights up innovation—but not clinical research

🛡️ Just a quick check We’re checking your connection to prevent automated abuse

NFL Analyst Raises Red Flags Over Arvell Reese’s Fit As Edge Rusher on PFSN’s Football Debate Club

As the 2026 NFL Draft approaches, few defensive prospects have generated as much intrigue as Ohio State’s Arvell Reese. Widely viewed as one of the most talented defenders in the class, Reese’s versatility has made him a standout on scouting boards. However, with that versatility comes an ongoing debate about how he projects at the

Athena launches FabOrchestrator, an agentic AI platform for manufacturing execution systems

In short: Athena Technology Solutions, a Fremont-based MES integrator with roughly 120 employees, has launched FabOrchestrator, an agentic AI platform for manufacturing that automates reporting, support tickets, system modelling, and code generation for semiconductor and electronics factories. Built in partnership with Bangalore-based LLM at Scale.AI, it layers LLM capabilities on top of the Siemens Opcenter

SoE necessary but not sufficient, business leaders say

PE­TER CHRISTO­PHER Se­nior Mul­ti­me­dia Re­porter pe­ter.christo­pher@guardian.co.tt Heavy hand­ed but nec­es­sary giv­en the state of crime in T&T. This was a com­mon as­sess­ment from var­i­ous busi­ness groups when asked for their per­spec­tive on the lat­est de­c­la­ra­tion of a state of emer­gency in the coun­try. The T&T Cham­ber of In­dus­try and Com­merce, in a re­leased is­sued yes­ter­day

The Big Business of Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy

Can a nine-episode limited series really impact an entire season of shopping trends? Today brands are experiencing—and chasing—the “Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy effect” as a result of Ryan Murphy’s Love Story. And in many cases, it’s more pervasive than they could have prepared for. The FX series, based on the relationship between John F. Kennedy Jr. and

‘Mind Your Own Business’: Kamal Haasan Rebukes Trump Over ‘Permission’ To Buy Russian Oil

Updated 8 March 2026 at 18:20 IST Actor and Rajya Sabha MP Kamal Haasan has hit out at US President Donald Trump after America announced that it has given India temporary "permission" to buy Russian oil amid global supply disruptions caused by the Middle East conflict. 'Mind Your Own Business': Kamal Haasan Rebukes Trump Over