key: cord-0982406-ajv2yl7p authors: Suah, Jing Lian; Tok, Peter Seah Keng; Ong, Su Miin; Husin, Masliyana; Tng, Boon Hwa; Sivasampu, Sheamini; Thevananthan, Thevesh; Appannan, Maheshwara Rao; Muhamad Zin, Faizah; Mohd Zin, Shahanizan; Yahaya, Hazlina; Rusli, Norhayati; Ujang, Mohd Fikri; Mohd Ibrahim, Hishamshah; Abdullah, Noor Hisham; Peariasamy, Kalaiarasu M. title: PICK-ing Malaysia’s Epidemic Apart: Effectiveness of a Diverse COVID-19 Vaccine Portfolio date: 2021-11-24 journal: Vaccines (Basel) DOI: 10.3390/vaccines9121381 sha: bfb5fd8b7a9725714827b5c123bfe33c4a77d9c5 doc_id: 982406 cord_uid: ajv2yl7p Malaysia rolled out a diverse portfolio of predominantly three COVID-19 vaccines (AZD1222, BNT162b2, and CoronaVac) beginning 24 February 2021. We evaluated vaccine effectiveness with two methods, covering 1 April to 15 September 2021: (1) the screening method for COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and symptomatic COVID-19; and (2) a retrospective cohort of confirmed COVID-19 cases for COVID-19 related ICU admission and death using logistic regression. The screening method estimated partial vaccination to be 48.8% effective (95% CI: 46.8, 50.7) against COVID-19 infection and 33.5% effective (95% CI: 31.6, 35.5) against symptomatic COVID-19. Full vaccination is estimated at 87.8% effective (95% CI: 85.8, 89.7) against COVID-19 infection and 85.4% effective (95% CI: 83.4, 87.3) against symptomatic COVID-19. Among the cohort of confirmed COVID-19 cases, partial vaccination with any of the three vaccines is estimated at 31.3% effective (95% CI: 28.5, 34.1) in preventing ICU admission, and 45.1% effective (95% CI: 42.6, 47.5) in preventing death. Full vaccination with any of the three vaccines is estimated at 79.1% effective (95% CI: 77.7, 80.4) in preventing ICU admission and 86.7% effective (95% CI: 85.7, 87.6) in preventing deaths. Our findings suggest that full vaccination with any of the three predominant vaccines (AZD1222, BNT162b2, and CoronaVac) in Malaysia has been highly effective in preventing COVID-19 infection, symptomatic COVID-19, COVID-19-related ICU admission, and death. Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a highly contagious disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Although COVID-19 principally targets the respiratory system, it can affect other major organ systems, potentially leading to death [1] . The main symptoms of COVID-19 include fever, cough, fatigue, and dyspnoea [2] . At present, the most used and validated diagnostic tests for COVID-19 include rapid antigen or antibody tests, immunoenzymatic serological tests, and molecular tests based on RT-PCR. Of these, RT-PCR-based molecular tests represent the gold standard in making a confirmatory diagnosis of COVID-19 infection [3] . Since being declared a pandemic on Vaccines 2021, 9, 1381 3 of 22 19 related deaths for a diverse vaccine portfolio, which includes CoronaVac, in Malaysia. Over the course of PICK between 1 April 2021 and 15 September 2021, full vaccination with any of the three predominant vaccines (AZD1222, BNT162b2, and CoronaVac) has been highly effective in preventing COVID-19 infection, symptomatic COVID-19, COVID-19-related ICU admission, and death. Absent of integrated electronic medical records, our analysis draws from four secondary data sets constructed from national COVID-19 surveillance: (1) the COVID-19 cases line listing, (2) the ICU admissions register, (3) the COVID-19 deaths line listing, and (4) the COVID-19 vaccine recipients line listing, linked deterministically with the case and personal identification numbers. At the time of writing, the COVID-19 cases and deaths line listings are published on the Ministry of Health Malaysia's GitHub repository [27] . Reporting of COVID-19 cases and deaths is mandatory by law. Details on the definition of outcomes and data sources can be found in Appendices C and D, respectively. Two methods are used: (1) the screening method to estimate vaccine effectiveness against COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2) infections, symptomatic COVID-19, and (2) a retrospective cohort study for ICU admission and COVID-19 related deaths. The screening method was introduced by Orenstein et al. [28] to measure vaccine effectiveness, using aggregated data representative of the population. Recent studies that apply this method include the evaluation of vaccine effectiveness for COVID-19 infection and severe disease in Spain [29] , for rotavirus in Japan [30] , for the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in the United States [31] , and for influenza among the elderly in Germany [32] . We used national-level data spanning Malaysia's population, comprising all individuals who have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccines up to 15 September 2021, and confirmed COVID-19 cases between 1 April 2021 and 15 September 2021. Vaccine effectiveness and the confidence intervals are calculated as per Orenstein et al. [28] : The screening method estimates vaccine effectiveness (VE) against disease outcome Y (COVID-19 infection and symptomatic for the vaccination status d (partially or fully vaccinated, inclusive of all vaccine types) using the following variables, computed on a cumulative basis. Proportion of population that is vaccinated, PPV; • Proportion of disease outcomes that are vaccinated, PCV. The retrospective cohort includes confirmed COVID-19 cases aged 18 years or older, assessed by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction assay (RT-PCR) or antigen testing. This reflects the initial age criteria to be vaccinated under PICK. Our cohort spans a six-month period from 1 April 2021 to 15 September 2021. Participants who received vaccines other than AZD1222, BNT162b2, and CoronaVac were excluded, as these vaccines were administered only towards the end of the study period and on a small number of people. Due to more complete information on the specific type of first dose received relative to that of the second dose, only information on the type of vaccine used for the first dose was used for analysis. Figure 1 depicts the study cohort. Of the 1,356,076 individuals aged 18 years or older with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections from 1 April 2021 to 15 September 2021, 1,286,881 were eligible for the study population. Study participants were classified into Vaccines 2021, 9, 1381 4 of 22 three groups: unvaccinated (did not receive any doses of AZD1222, BNT162b2, or Coro-naVac), partially vaccinated (≥1 day after the receipt of the first dose of any of the three vaccines until before the receipt of the second dose), and fully vaccinated (≥14 days after the receipt of the second dose of any of the three vaccines). Figure 1 depicts the study cohort. Of the 1,356,076 individuals aged 18 years or older with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections from 1 April 2021 to 15 September 2021, 1,286,881 were eligible for the study population. Study participants were classified into three groups: unvaccinated (did not receive any doses of AZD1222, BNT162b2, or CoronaVac), partially vaccinated (≥1 day after the receipt of the first dose of any of the three vaccines until before the receipt of the second dose), and fully vaccinated (≥14 days after the receipt of the second dose of any of the three vaccines). We estimated vaccine effectiveness by vaccination status and type with logistic regression. This approach resembles the study by Hak et al. [33] , who estimated adjusted odds ratios for severe symptoms or deaths among vaccinated and unvaccinated people from a cohort of influenza patients in the Netherlands. Further description of the methodology is in Appendix E. All analyses were conducted with Python, version 3.9 [34] . Figure 1 . Study participants and cohort eligibility. Cohort participants were all confirmed SARS-CoV-2 cases in Malaysia from 1 April 2021 to 15 September 2021, aged 18 years or older. All participants either had not received any (unvaccinated) or at least one dose of the AZD1222, BNT162b2, or CoronaVac vaccines. Individuals who received any vaccines other than the ones specified above were excluded from the cohort. The screening method estimates partial vaccination to be 48.8% effective (95% CI: 46 1 . Study participants and cohort eligibility. Cohort participants were all confirmed SARS-CoV-2 cases in Malaysia from 1 April 2021 to 15 September 2021, aged 18 years or older. All participants either had not received any (unvaccinated) or at least one dose of the AZD1222, BNT162b2, or CoronaVac vaccines. Individuals who received any vaccines other than the ones specified above were excluded from the cohort. We estimated vaccine effectiveness by vaccination status and type with logistic regression. This approach resembles the study by Hak et al. [33] , who estimated adjusted odds ratios for severe symptoms or deaths among vaccinated and unvaccinated people from a cohort of influenza patients in the Netherlands. Further description of the methodology is in Appendix E. All analyses were conducted with Python, version 3.9 [34] . The screening method estimates partial vaccination to be 48.8% effective (95% CI: 46 Table 2 presents descriptive statistics for the study cohort. A chi-squared test of independence suggests there are significant differences in the sex, age, nationality, symptomatic presentation, and presence of comorbidities according to vaccination status (unvaccinated, partially vaccinated, and fully vaccinated), as well as by vaccine type and vaccination status. A larger share of COVID-19 patients who were either partially or fully vaccinated was symptomatic at presentation. In contrast, most unvaccinated COVID-19 patients were asymptomatic at presentation. Further details are in Table A1 . Table 3 . The unadjusted and partially adjusted estimates are in Tables A2-A5. In Tables A6 and A7, we summarise the sensitivity of the fully adjusted, partially adjusted, and unadjusted effectiveness estimates by vaccine type to the definition of partial vaccination, considering both 1 day and 14 days after receiving the first dose of AZD1222, BNT162b2, or CoronaVac. In the alternative definition (≥14 days after the receipt of the first dose of any of the three vaccines), by excluding events occurring up to the 13th day after receiving the first dose, effectiveness for partial vaccination is higher than the main definition (≥1 day after the receipt of first dose), but the effectiveness estimates for full vaccination remain broadly unaffected. We further conduct a robustness check by estimating the effectiveness of partial and full vaccination with a daily-incremental sample and find the estimates to be stable over our study period ( Figure 2 , Figure A2 , and Figure A3 ). after the receipt of the first dose of any of the three vaccines), by excluding events occurring up to the 13th day after receiving the first dose, effectiveness for partial vaccination is higher than the main definition (≥1 day after the receipt of first dose), but the effectiveness estimates for full vaccination remain broadly unaffected. We further conduct a robustness check by estimating the effectiveness of partial and full vaccination with a dailyincremental sample and find the estimates to be stable over our study period (Figures 2, A2, and A3). This study presents findings on vaccine effectiveness in an LMIC with a uniquely diverse vaccine portfolio, primarily BNT162b2, AZD1222, and CoronaVac, which arose due to (1) setbacks in supply despite advance procurement agreements and broadly lower vaccine supply in LMICs, (2) maximisation of vaccine coverage under uncertainty in effi- This study presents findings on vaccine effectiveness in an LMIC with a uniquely diverse vaccine portfolio, primarily BNT162b2, AZD1222, and CoronaVac, which arose due to (1) setbacks in supply despite advance procurement agreements and broadly lower vaccine supply in LMICs, (2) maximisation of vaccine coverage under uncertainty in efficacy (limited evidence in early 2021), and (3) prioritisation of vulnerable groups amid the then-rising global prevalence of variants of concern, such as Delta (B.1.617.2). Despite these challenges in the nationwide rollout, as of 15 September 2021, more than half of Malaysia's total population is fully vaccinated. The findings show that being fully vaccinated reduced ICU admission with an effectiveness of 79.1% (95% CI: 77.7, 80.4) and death with an effectiveness of 86.7% (95% CI: 85.7, 87.6) among confirmed COVID-19 cases. Our estimates by vaccine types are comparable to interim estimates for Chile announced by the Government of Chile [35] in August 2021, which uses a similar portfolio of AZD1222, BNT162b2, and CoronaVac, albeit more reliant on CoronaVac. The complementary screening method estimated an effectiveness of 87.8% (95% CI: 85.8, 89.7) against COVID-19 infection and 85.4% (95% CI: 83.4, 87.3) against symptomatic COVID-19. This motivates that vaccines may reduce the risk of COVID-19 transmission and substantially for severe outcomes. Using the screening method, our findings show that being fully vaccinated with any of the three vaccines studied reduces the risk of COVID-19 infections and symptomatic COVID-19 by at least 80%. These estimates are higher than those reported for preventing infections among elderly long-term care facility residents in Spain, where the screening method was used. This may be due to that long-term care facility residents having a higher exposure risk than the general population [29] . Real-world evidence on vaccine effectiveness for CoronaVac remains scarce, despite being approved by more than 30 countries and jurisdictions and administered in mass vaccination campaigns, particularly LMICs who experienced resurgences due to variants of concern [13, 20, 21, 36] . Estimates of vaccine efficacy for CoronaVac against symptomatic COVID-19 in controlled trials varied from 51% to 84% [6, 9] . A prospective national cohort study in Chile using the CoronaVac vaccine reported 87.5% effectiveness in preventing hospitalisation, 90.3% for preventing ICU admission, and 86.3% for preventing COVID-19related death [13] . While the methodologies differ, our effectiveness estimates for Coro-naVac in preventing ICU admission (72.0%) and deaths (82.4%) add to existing evidence that full vaccination with CoronaVac is highly effective in preventing severe outcomes due to COVID-19. Our study notes that the effectiveness estimates for the AZD1222 and BNT162b2 vaccines are higher than that of the CoronaVac vaccine. The effectiveness estimates of both vaccines for preventing ICU admission and death are comparable to earlier studies, although methodological differences exist [19] . The estimates for AZD1222 may be subject to selection bias due to its opt-in nature, while its later rollout resulted in a shorter follow-up period than the other two vaccines. Nonetheless, the estimates are robust to varying the time coverage of the study cohort ( Figure 2 ), which spanned a period coinciding with the prevalence of new variants of concern [37] [38] [39] . The estimates do not uncover vaccine effectiveness to specific variants, given insufficient granular data on the breakdown of the retrospective cohort participants by specific variants. To robustly assess this aspect, more comprehensive genomic surveillance needs to be conducted. Our findings should be interpreted with two caveats. First, effectiveness against COVID-19 infections and symptomatic COVID-19 are estimated with aggregate data and the screening method. This trades away adjustments for confounders and is subject to an upward bias under non-comprehensive testing [28] . While computationally simple and feasible with aggregate data, the methodology could not explicitly account for stratification by specific vaccine types. In contrast, the logistic regression in the retrospective cohort approach allows this flexibility. Given this and the differently timed rollouts of the three vaccines, it may be unfeasible to estimate effectiveness by vaccine types. Hence, we caution on generalising the estimates, despite being comparable to previous studies, which investigated the effectiveness of the three dominant vaccines in Malaysia, albeit via different methods [9, 13, 15, 19] . Second, adequate visibility at the individual level was limited to confirmed COVID-19 cases. Hence, effectiveness against ICU admission and death are conditional on infection. As we analysed available secondary data sets in the retrospective cohort approach, we were limited by the availability of variables and were unable to investigate socio-economic factors or related risk behaviours. Moreover, only the presence of symptoms and comorbidities could be ascertained, but estimates do not change materially based on sensitivity analyses. Finally, our study period of over five months may be inadequate to observe all outcomes of interest for cases near the end of the study period. Our study has three strengths. First, we used a rich data set consolidated from multiple official and granular data sources with nationally representative coverage. This enabled controlling for confounders at the individual level within our cohort of confirmed COVID-19 cases. Second, the study was conducted when COVID-19 incidence rates in Malaysia peaked and spanned the emergence of many SARS-CoV-2 variants. This enhances the reliability of our effectiveness estimates amid uncertainty over the impact of these variants on the effectiveness of widely administered vaccines [15, 37, 38] . While we cannot ascertain the impact of specific variants of concern due to the lack of genomic data at the individual level, we demonstrated that effectiveness estimates are stable over the latter part of our study period. Third, our study addresses the gap in evidence on vaccine effectiveness in LMICs and contributes insights on the effectiveness of a diverse vaccine portfolio within a nationwide mass vaccination programme. Our findings show that the COVID-19 vaccines used in Malaysia are effective, particularly in preventing ICU admission and death among COVID-19 cases, consistent with other studies. At present, we are unable to report detailed results on the safety profiles and adverse events of vaccines under PICK, for which monitoring and evaluation are ongoing. As current cross-country evidence [19] , including our findings, show that vaccine effectiveness against severe outcomes remains high, further research is needed to ascertain the optimal timing for boosting in the general population. Informed Consent Statement: Informed consent was waived as data sets were reviewed retrospectively, and all data were anonymised before use in analyses. The anonymised data presented in this study are available on reasonable request. The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. Malaysia has a reported population of 32.7 million in 2020, of whom approximately 29.7 million are citizens and 3.0 million are non-citizens. Malaysia has a multi-ethnic population. The three largest ethnicities are the Malays (69.6%), Chinese (22.6%), and Indians (6.8%) [23] . About 23.4 million of Malaysia's population are aged 18 years and above, while 3.5 million are aged 60 years and older [22, 23] . Malaysia has seen three waves of COVID-19 since reporting its first case on 4 February 2020, followed by a resurgence driven by local transmission from a large-scale social gathering, culminating in a nationwide lockdown on 18 March 2020. After daily cases remained low at single and double digits between July to September 2020, Malaysia experienced its third wave in October 2020. Both cases and deaths remained elevated [40, 41] . In May 2021, reported COVID-19 cases rose peaked at 8,000 daily, with more than 70,000 active cases at one time. Taking into consideration the rise in cases, healthcare response burden (increasingly limited hospital capacity, quarantine units, and test capacity to treat COVID-19 patients), as well as an increase in the prevalence of variants of concern, especially Beta (B.1.351) and Delta (B.1.617.2), a nationwide lockdown was implemented from 1 June 2021 onwards, restricting economic activities to essential and export-oriented sectors, while all social activities and inter-district movement were prohibited [25, 42] . Malaysia has a high burden of non-communicable diseases. In the recent national health and morbidity survey (NHMS) conducted in 2019, an overall prevalence of 18.3% of diabetes and 30.0% of hypertension among adults was reported [43] . About one in every two adults in Malaysia was found to be overweight or obese (30.4% overweight and 19.7% obese), and 21.3% of adults were current smokers [43] . These risk factors have been associated with a higher risk of severe illness from COVID-19 [44] , thus warranting further attention amid the rise in COVID-19 infections. Along with movement, and economic restrictions implemented during the lockdown, intensive public health measures were also executed to bring the surge of cases under control. These included increased genomic surveillance, expanded capacities at quarantine centres, hospitals, and intensive care units (ICUs), and reprioritised healthcare resources to outbreak areas facing surges in COVID-19 cases. Even as vaccines were rolled out, throughout PICK, COVID-19 testing remained extensive in Malaysia, and was among the highest globally. Between 1 April 2021 and 15 September, Malaysia conducted a total of 18,227,550 COVID-19 diagnostic tests, or 55.8 tests per 100 population (RTK-Ag: 8,526,783 or 26.1 per 100 population; RT-PCR: 9,700,767 or 29.7 per 100 population), one of the highest globally, including high-income countries (HICs). The average positivity rate was 7.97% [23, 42] . Finally, data analytics were also intensified to assist the epidemic management effort, leading to the creation of automated contact tracing and hotspot prediction systems using granular movement and COVID-19 diagnostic test data. The Government of Malaysia's overarching vaccination strategy is to maximise vaccine coverage in the shortest timespan feasible to minimise deaths and severe COVID-19 outcomes. COVID-19 vaccines are provided for free to all residents, including non-citizens, of Malaysia. To ensure timely, safe, and effective access to COVID-19 vaccines, the Special Committee for Ensuring Access to COVID-19 Vaccine Supply (Jawatankuasa Khas Jaminan Akses Bekalan Vaksin COVID-19, JKJAV) was established [26] . JKJAV, co-chaired by the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation, is responsible for the planning, implementation, and monitoring of the National COVID-19 Immunisation Programme (Programme Imunisasi COVID-19 Kebangsaan, PICK). JKJAV decides medical-related policies and issues, such as the choice of vaccine and vaccination for adolescents. The coordination, and execution of PICK, rests on the COVID-19 Immunisation Overall, PICK's prioritisation strategy carefully considered epidemiological and clinical evidence, the availability of vaccines, and operational constraints. As of February 2021, up to 66.7 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines were secured through the COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) Facility and advanced purchases from five manufacturers9. The supply and delivery of vaccines were phased and approved by the National Pharmaceutical Regulatory Agency (NPRA) before being rolled out. BNT162b2 was the first vaccine to be conditionally approved on 8 January 2021, followed by CoronaVac and AZD1222 on 2 March 2021 [45] . Other vaccines have also been conditionally approved by the NPRA, although BNT162b2, AZD1222, and CoronaVac constituted the majority of vaccines administered. Since the beginning of PICK up until 15 September 2021, all three vaccines were two-dose regimes, with doses administered 21 days apart for BNT162b2 and CoronaVac and 63 days apart for AZD1222. An individual is deemed fully vaccinated 14 days after receiving the second dose of any of the three vaccines (BNT162b2, CoronaVac, and AZD1222). Mass vaccination drives globally are often met with logistical challenges, including delivery uncertainty, storage and administration of vaccines, the quality and capacity of healthcare infrastructure, as well as demographics. Malaysia faced similar challenges, and selective rollout of vaccines was often necessary dependent on the factors mentioned above. BNT162b2 was primarily administered in Phases 1 and 3 of PICK. CoronaVac was administered primarily in phase 2 and the early part of phase 3. AZD1222 was introduced in May 2021 through two opt-in registrations, focused on areas with high disease burdens, such as Klang Valley (Selangor, Kuala Lumpur, and Putrajaya), Kuching District of Sarawak, Penang, and Johor, before being fully integrated into PICK by July 2021. There were certain unique circumstances surrounding the rollout of the respective vaccines under PICK. CoronaVac was conditionally approved for the general population on 2 March 2021, prior to the WHO's authorisation for emergency use on 1 June 2021, amid early evidence of adequate efficacy [6, 9] . The initial plan to roll out AZD1222 in May 2021 was met with hesitancy due to international reports linking the vaccine to thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS). CITF introduced a separate opt-in stream for the AZD1222 vaccine after being approved by JKJAV for use. Following two opt-in launches in May 2021, which recorded overwhelming demand, AZD1222 was subsequently reintegrated into the mainstream rollout under PICK. This deviation from the initially planned phases of PICK is reflected in generally younger recipients for AZD1222, who had voluntarily signed up to receive vaccinations earlier in lieu of waiting for phase 3. Given that epidemic control was an objective of PICK, the timing and resources dedicated to vaccination were reprioritised and differed across states during Phases 2 and 3. Vaccination rates in states with worse COVID-19 disease burden would be higher, exerting biases on the vaccine effectiveness estimates if left unadjusted. Hence, our analysis adjusted for state-specific factors with state dummies. PICK was ramped up in July 2021 when supply constraints were resolved, which coincided with the peak of the national infection incidence rate and increasing prevalence of variants of concern. Cumulative confirmed COVID-19 cases exceeded one million on 26 July 2021 and eclipsed two million by 27 September 2021. To facilitate a rapid rollout, PICK leveraged on private healthcare providers to supplement mega vaccination centres, as well as outreach programmes to vaccinate individuals living in remote areas, especially in the states of Sabah and Sarawak. In essence, PICK remobilised national resources to maximise vaccine coverage over the shortest possible duration to mitigate COVID-19 amid early supply constraints, as well as uncertainty over the then-available vaccines. The public healthcare system and infrastructure in Malaysia were pivotal in facilitating the rapid rollout of PICK. Immunisation programmes in Malaysia could be traced to their integration within the Maternal and Child Health (MCH) programmes since the 1950s. This network of healthcare resources, remobilised into a dense network of vaccination centres and outreach programmes, facilitated a rapid rollout of vaccines nationwide, including rural areas. Underpinning PICK's demand and rapid rollout is a digitalised, user-friendly process that is integrated into the Malaysia Vaccine Administration System (MyVAS). The entire flow from registration, scheduling of appointments, validation of vaccination, monitoring of adverse events following immunisation (AEFIs) could be conducted through the My-Sejahtera application. Individuals without the MySejahtera application could register as dependents of pre-existing MySejahtera users at designated public and private healthcare facilities, a dedicated telephone hotline, the PICK website. Importantly, communities in rural, interior, or hard-to-reach areas were vaccinated via outreach programmes upon consent, even without prior registration. Appointments were optimised for accessibility by vaccine registrants and reflective of the prioritisation of the various phases of PICK. High vaccine effectiveness is reflected in Malaysia's improved state of the epidemic. COVID-19 deaths and ICU admissions trended down after peaking in July by September, in line with observations in HICs with high vaccine coverage but less diverse portfolios, e.g., Singapore and the United Kingdom. This reduction in healthcare burden facilitated a gradual lifting of restrictions on economic sectors. Malaysia's vaccination strategy, which prioritised maximum and rapid vaccine coverage amid supply constraints, uncertainty in the effectiveness of then-available vaccines, and rising prevalence of new variants, can be a reference, especially supply-constrained LMICs with low vaccine coverage. Importantly, PICK's logistic success, reflected in vaccine coverage exceeding most HICs within a short duration [46] , rests on robust computerised, centralised, and easily analysable COVID-19 databases. As of 15 September 2021, through PICK, the proportion of the population fully vaccinated in Malaysia is at 54.6%, of which AZD1222 comprised 3.2 percentage points, BNT162b2 23.0 percentage points, and CoronaVac 26.5 percentage points. Additionally, beginning September 2021, the vaccination of adolescents (aged 12 to 17 years) in Malaysia commenced with the BNT162b2 vaccine. Figure A1 shows Malaysia's vaccine coverage by type, confirmed cases, and the Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker (OxCGRT) Stringency Index [47] , which indicates containment restrictiveness from 1 April 2021 to 15 September. BNT162b2 23.0 percentage points, and CoronaVac 26.5 percentage points. Additionally, beginning September 2021, the vaccination of adolescents (aged 12 to 17 years) in Malaysia commenced with the BNT162b2 vaccine. Figure A1 shows Malaysia's vaccine coverage by type, confirmed cases, and the Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker (Ox-CGRT) Stringency Index [47] , which indicates containment restrictiveness from 1 April 2021 to 15 September. Definition of outcome measures is based on the COVID-19 management guidelines by the Ministry of Health Malaysia. i. A COVID-19 confirmed case was defined as a person with laboratory confirmation* of infection with the COVID-19 irrespective of clinical signs or symptoms. *A person with a positive molecular test (RT-PCR or rapid molecular) or a person with positive RTK-Ag in pre-determined areas/locality with the prevalence of COVID-19 ≥ 10% ii. Symptomatic COVID-19 confirmed cases A COVID-19 confirmed case with reported signs or symptoms such as fever, chill, rigours, myalgia, headache, sore throat, nausea or vomiting, diarrhoea, fatigue, nasal congestion, cough, shortness of breath, difficulty in breathing, sudden onset of anosmia, and/or ageusia. iii. COVID-19 ICU admissions • If a postmortem is conducted, the classification of COVID-19 death shall be in accordance with the autopsy death report; • If the autopsy is not performed, the death of COVID-19 must meet the following criteria: Has an epidemiological link with another COVID-19 case. • Supportive radiological investigation, if any (examples: chest x-ray, postmortem computed tomography scan, etc.), which shows signs of COVID-19 infection, can also be used as a supportive modality for the attending specialist in charge. However, it is not a criterion that must be met for the confirmation of "Death Due to COVID-19". National-level data were extracted from secondary data sources from The registry encompassed all individuals who have received a COVID-19 vaccine via PICK and is the 'single source of truth' of COVID-19 vaccine recipients in Malaysia. The data were constructed for the planning and operationalisation of PICK and were directly used in issuing appointments, tracking vaccine coverage by demographics, risk groups, and location, as well as in planning the allocation of resources. Appendix E. 1 Vaccine effectiveness is calculated as follows, with confidence intervals as per Orenstein et al. [28] : The screening method estimates vaccine effectiveness (VE) against disease outcome Y (infection and symptomatic infection) for the vaccination status d (partially or fully vaccinated, inclusive of all vaccine types) using the variables as follows, computed on a cumulative basis. The proportion of the population that is vaccinated, or vaccination coverage in population, PPV. This approach compares the observed gap between vaccine coverage (PPV) and the proportion of outcomes (PCV) that are vaccinated against an unobserved counterfactual of 100% vaccine effectiveness. While computationally simple, the screening method does not permit stratification by vaccine types, as the PPV term will be constrained to values less than 1, as opposed to freely between 0 (zero vaccine coverage) and 1 (full vaccine coverage), due to the rollout of multiple vaccine types, otherwise resulting in potentially incorrect effectiveness estimates. Drawing from the individual-level data sets, this empirical strategy estimates the adjusted odds ratio against ICU admission and death, conditional on age, presence of comorbidities, presentation of symptoms, state-and time-specific unobservables, for the retrospective cohort of COVID-19 cases. The vaccine effectiveness is implied directly by the estimated adjusted odds ratios. Absent of individual-level data on demographic factors, location, comorbidities on individuals who test negative, i.e., not infected by COVID-19, we cannot infer effectiveness as in a traditional cohort or case-control study, which includes uninfected individuals. However, this provides a clean interpretation on risk reduction in severe outcomes, and deaths, assuming infected. The model is linearly parameterised. We regress the disease outcome of interest Y (ICU admission and death) on a constant, a dummy indicating the individual's vaccination status (partially, and fully, with the unvaccinated group being the omitted term), {Vax}, which is disaggregated further into AZD1222, BNT162b2, and CoronaVac. The vaccine effectiveness is then calculated from the adjusted odds ratio on the 'treatment' dummy via 100 × (1 − exp(β)). 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