Impact of COVID-19 vaccination and vaccine type on morbidity and mortality in hospitalized patients: a retrospective cohort study in Egypt
Nehal Mohamed Eisa, Ramy M. El Sabaa, Shrouq Sayed Abdelrazik, Rana A. Hussein, Marwa M. Gaballah, Reem S. Mahmoud, Nourhan M. Kamal, Mostafa Ahmed, Ahmed Essam Abou Warda, Seif El Hadidi, Heba Khaled, Heba Salama, Haidy M. Sami, Mostafa M. Bahaa, Hayam Ali AlRasheed

TL;DR
This study finds that being vaccinated against COVID-19 reduces hospital mortality and severity, with no major differences between vaccine types.
Contribution
The study provides real-world evidence on the effectiveness of different vaccine types in hospitalized patients in Egypt.
Findings
Vaccinated patients had lower mortality and better recovery rates compared to unvaccinated patients.
Moderna vaccination was an independent predictor of survival, along with milder disease severity.
No significant differences were found among vaccine types in terms of clinical outcomes or mortality.
Abstract
COVID-19 remains associated with significant morbidity and mortality, particularly among hospitalized patients. Vaccination has been shown to reduce disease severity; however, real-world data comparing outcomes between vaccinated and unvaccinated patients and among different vaccine types remain limited. This study included 478 hospitalized patients with suspected or confirmed COVID-19. Demographic characteristics, vaccination status, comorbidities, disease severity, clinical outcomes, and mortality were assessed. Comparative analyses were performed between vaccinated and unvaccinated patients. Multivariable logistic regression was conducted to identify independent predictors of survival. A head-to-head comparison evaluated the impact of different vaccine types on hospitalization and outcomes. The mean age of patients was 60.63 ± 13.86 years, and 56.9% were female. Most patients were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · Immune responses and vaccinations
