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What are the benefits of mixing and matching COVID-19 booster vaccines

Quels sont les avantages de combiner et d'associer les vaccins de rappel contre la COVID-19 ?

With cases of COVID-19 rising in the UK, people who are eligible are being urged to get their booster vaccines. Some people may receive a different vaccine from the one they had for their previous jabs. But is this safe - and are there any advantages to mixing and matching vaccines?

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People who are most at risk are eligible for a COVID-19 booster jab on the NHS. All adults aged 65 years and over are being offered the vaccine automatically.

À partir de septembre 2023, vous ne pouvez obtenir le vaccin COVID-19 auprès du NHS que si vous remplissez certains critères. Il n'est pas possible de l'acheter en privé.

Les groupes suivants peuvent recevoir une dose de rappel de vaccination cet automne :

Résidents dans les maisons de retraite pour personnes âgées.

Adultes âgés de 65 ans et plus.

Personnes de six mois à 64 ans appartenant à un groupe à risque clinique.

Travailleurs de la santé et des services sociaux en première ligne.

Personnes âgées de 12 à 64 ans qui sont en contact domestique avec des personnes ayant un système immunitaire affaibli.

Personnes âgées de 16 à 64 ans qui sont aidants et personnel travaillant dans des maisons de soins pour personnes âgées.

Femmes enceintes.

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Mixing and matching COVID-19 booster jabs

When you have your booster jab, you'll be given a vaccine made by Pfizer, Sanofi or Moderna - and it might not be the same brand of vaccine you've had before. But experts say mixing and matching which jabs you have is common and may give you more protection against the virus.

William Schaffner, a professor of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University, says mixing and matching for booster jabs is becoming more common for two reasons. "The most important reason is that mixing offers advantages in enhanced immune response and, therefore, anticipated enhanced protection. The les réponses immunitaires response after mixing is often higher than after matching," he says.

"There is a relatively small advantage to mixing the two mRNA vaccines (Pfizer and Moderna). However, there is substantial enhanced immunogenicity - a measure of how well a vaccine works - when the vector-based Johnson & Johnson vaccine (similar to the AstraZeneca vaccine) is followed by an mRNA vaccine."

The second reason is convenience. Mixing COVID-19 vaccines is emerging as a good way to get people the protection they need when faced with unpredictable supplies. "The individual may find that their most convenient vaccine provider has a couverture vaccinale different from the individual's first dose - just easier to mix rather than to match," says Schaffner.

Multiple studies have shown that mixing and matching COVID-19 jabs is safe - it can also be more effective than having the same vaccine for each dose.

Rodney E. Rohde, a professor of clinical laboratory science and an infectious disease specialist at Texas State University, says: "Research and global real-time data have shown mixing and matching as an approach for la vaccination contre la COVID-19 is safe. In some cases, it can even be more effective than not mixing. It can show a very strong 'boost' effect."

In other words, mixing and matching vaccines can produce a stronger antibody response than sticking with the same vaccine for all doses. The exact reason why combining vaccines might improve efficacy is unknown, but we do know that les vaccins present the same information in different ways.

For example, mRNA vaccines teach cells how to make a similar protein that triggers an immune response if someone gets infected. Vector-based vaccines such as AstraZeneca use a modified version of a virus that is different from the virus being targeted, in order to present part of the spike protein from the surface of SARS-CoV-2 - the virus that causes COVID-19 - to our immune systems. The Sanofi vaccine is protein-based and contains copies of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein from the Beta variant.

It is thought that when combined, these differences might kick start different parts of the immune system or trigger a stronger immune response. This may make immunity last longer too.

A study by Umeå University in Sweden showed a 67% lower risk of infection for the combination of the AstraZeneca vaccine followed by the Pfizer jab, compared to people who hadn't been vaccinated1. This compared to a 50% reduction among people who had the Oxford jab twice.

Meanwhile, having the AstraZeneca vaccine followed by Moderna - another mRNA vaccine - cut the risk of infection even more sharply, by 79%.

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Other studies have found that mixing COVID-19 vaccines can produce a stronger immune response. A Spanish study reported that people who initially received the AstraZeneca vaccine experienced a significant increase to their antiviral immunity when given a second dose of the Pfizer vaccine2.

"A National Institutes of Health study3 tested nine different combinations of Johnson & Johnson, Moderna and Pfizer vaccines given to 458 participants and found that mixing was safe and highly effective," says Rohde.

"The concise story of this study shows that receiving a booster shot greatly increased the circulating number of antibodies including neutralising antibodies - molecules that bind to the virus and stop it from infecting cells - against SARS-CoV-2."

The priority for everyone, especially vulnerable people, is to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19. People who are eligible for their booster are being encouraged to get it as soon as possible.

"The most important thing is for people to be vaccinated," says Rohde. "Those initial vaccines are critical to help reduce the ease at which SARS-CoV-2 can find a host. The more we can enhance immunity in the global population, typically the more we can reduce the virus from easily mutating.

"We may not stop it, but we can reduce the danger and slow down the mutation. Immuno-compromised and others in high-risk work groups - for example, healthcare workers - are among those most strongly recommended to get vaccinated, when the time comes, to be boosted."

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  1. Nordstrom et al: Effectiveness of heterologous ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 and mRNA prime-boost vaccination against symptomatic Covid-19 infection in Sweden: A nationwide cohort study.

  2. Borobia et al: Immunogenicity and reactogenicity of BNT162b2 booster in ChAdOx1-S-primed participants (CombiVacS): a multicentre, open-label, randomised, controlled, phase 2 trial.

  3. Atmar et al: Heterologous SARS-CoV-2 booster vaccinations – Preliminary report.

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About the author

Author image

Lydia Smith

Feature writer

BA, MA, MSc

Lydia Smith is an award-winning journalist and feature writer who has written extensively on women's health and mental health. She is currently studying for an MSc in psychology.

About the reviewerView full bio

Author image

Dr Krishna Vakharia, MRCGP

Chief Medical Officer for Health, Optum UK

MBChB, MRCGP(2013), BMedSci (hons), DFSRH, DRCOG, PGDipDerm (Distn)

Dr Krishna Vakharia is an NHS GP. She is also a regular examiner for the postgraduate Diploma in Practical Dermatology at Cardiff University as well as being the Chief Medical Officer for health at Optum UK.

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