Infants born to mothers who received mRNA COVID vaccination during pregnancy had a 36% lower risk of COVID–related hospital contact in their first 6 months of life, according to a study published in Pediatrics. The protective effect did not extend to other types of infections.
In this cohort study that looked at all live-born infants in Norway from March 2021 to December 2023, researchers led by a team at the Department of Community Medicine and Global Health at the University of Oslo looked at health outcomes among newborns whose mothers were vaccinated during pregnancy and compared them with those whose mothers weren’t vaccinated while pregnant.
The analysis found that maternal vaccination was associated with a 36% reduced risk of hospital care for COVID in early infancy (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.64), a period when infants are not yet eligible for vaccination. Infants aged 6 months and younger have the highest rates of pediatric hospitalizations due to COVID infection. Protection waned from 52% in the first two months of age to 24% for three- to five-month-olds.
Vaccine protects against COVID, but not other infections
“[Maternal] vaccination protects the infant indirectly through protecting the mother, and directly by stimulating the production of maternal antibodies, including immunoglobulin G (IgG), which is actively transported across the placenta, and immunoglobulin A, which is secreted in breast milk,” note the authors. “Maternal antibodies confer immunity to the infant before they gradually wane and disappear.”
One aim of the study was to determine whether maternal COVID vaccination would help protect against other types of infection in infancy, but the findings showed no evidence that COVID vaccination reduced the risk of hospital contact for infections other than COVID.
The analysis had some limitations, including potential differences in health care use between vaccinated and unvaccinated mothers. The study’s main strength is its large sample size, with researchers looking at all live births in Norway over a roughly 2.5-year period.