2022
DOI: 10.1002/jmv.28188
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Impact of COVID‐19 vaccination on transmission risk of breakthrough infections: Lessons from adapted N95 mask sampling for emerging variants and interventions

Abstract: This study used an adapted N95 mask sampling to understand the effect of COVID‐19 vaccination in the context of circulating variants on infected individuals to emit the virus into the air, a key risk factor of transmission. Mask, swab, and blood samples were collected from 92 COVID‐19 patients vaccinated (Covishield/COVAXIN‐partial/fully) or unvaccinated between July and September 2021 during the Delta‐dominated period in Mumbai. Mask/swab samples were analysed by RT‐PCR for viral RNA. Blood was evaluated for … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…On the other hand, the data sets in 12 studies described a higher viral load among the vaccinated compared to the unvaccinated. The difference was significant in three studies [27,30,38], not significant in eight studies [20,26,29,30,[33][34][35]40] and without reporting results of a statistical evaluation in two studies [22,32]. Among the boosted population (having received one dose of booster after the completion of the original course of vaccination), the effect of a lower viral load is insignificant within 61 to 120 days [49].…”
Section: Ct Values According To Vaccination Statusmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…On the other hand, the data sets in 12 studies described a higher viral load among the vaccinated compared to the unvaccinated. The difference was significant in three studies [27,30,38], not significant in eight studies [20,26,29,30,[33][34][35]40] and without reporting results of a statistical evaluation in two studies [22,32]. Among the boosted population (having received one dose of booster after the completion of the original course of vaccination), the effect of a lower viral load is insignificant within 61 to 120 days [49].…”
Section: Ct Values According To Vaccination Statusmentioning
confidence: 95%