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ObjectivesTo explore whether COVID-19 vaccination protects against hospital admission by preventing infections and severe disease.MethodsWe leveraged the UK-Biobank(UKBB) and studied associations of COVID-19 vaccination (BioNTech-BNT162b2 or Oxford-AstraZeneca-ChAdOx1) with hospitalizations from cardiovascular and other selected diseases(N=393,544; median follow-up=54 days among vaccinated). Multivariable Cox, Poisson regression, propensity score matching(PSM) and inverse probability treatment weighting(IPTW) analyses were performed. We also performed adjustment using prescription-time distribution matching(PTDM) and prior-event rate ratio(PERR).ResultsWe observed that COVID-19 vaccination(at least one dose), when compared to no vaccination, was associated with reduced short-term risks of hospitalizations from stroke(hazard ratioHR=0.178, 95%CI:0.127-0.250,P=1.50e-23), venous thromboembolism(VTE) (HR=0.426,CI:0.270-0.673,P=2.51e-4), dementia (HR=0.114,CI:0.060-0.216;P=2.24e-11), non-COVID-19 pneumonia(NCP) (HR=0.108,CI:0.080-0.145;P=2.20e-49), coronary artery disease(CAD) (HR=0.563,CI:0.416-0.762;P=2.05e-4), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease(COPD) (HR=0.212,CI:0.126-0.357;P=4.92e-9), type-2 diabetes(T2DM) (HR=0.216,CI:0.096-0.486,P=2.12e-4), heart failure (HR=0.174,CI:0.118-0.256,P=1.34e-18) and renal failure (HR=0.415,CI:0.255- 0.677,P=4.19e-4), based on standard Cox regression models. Among the above results, reduced hospitalizations for stroke, heart failure, NCP and dementia were consistently observed across regression, PSM/IPTW, PTDM, and PERR. The results for 2-dose vaccination were similar.ConclusionsTaken together, this study provides further support to the safety and benefits of COVID-19 vaccination, and such benefits may extend beyond reduction of infection risk or severity per se. However, causal relationship cannot be concluded and further studies are required.
Xiang et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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