In this study, healthy children who received the third vaccine dose also experienced more side effects, such as fever and pain, than with the first two doses.
Ooi, the supervising scientist of the study, said, “This study provides evidence for clinical practice guidelines worldwide for the vaccination of future birth cohorts of children against COVID-19. The evidence supports a two-dose vaccination regimen for children.”
For Zhong, the study was particularly close to her heart: “I am a mother to one and expecting my second at the moment. As a mother, I am especially humbled by the willingness of many families and children who donated their time and bio samples to our work. It is of paramount importance that research for child health is conducted in the correct target population in order to be directly applicable. I applaud the heroic efforts of the children and families who took part in our study, and hope that more families will support the culture of paediatric research in Singapore.”
The study, which was published in Nature Medicine, also found comparable immune responses in children compared to healthy adults. These findings do not apply, however, to children or adults who are more vulnerable to severe COVID-19, such as older adults and those living with chronic diseases or are immunocompromised. For them, third and subsequent doses of vaccination would still be beneficial.
Next, Zhong and the team plan to investigate why some children develop better T-cell responses than others, since T-cell responses have been identified to be the most important predictor of protection. They hope to identify those children with poorer T-cell responses, and tailor vaccination regimes to their immune systems and improve the future design of mRNA vaccines.