| >That's not what this says I admit I'm not medically trained, but the graph [1] seems pretty clear to me, and the authors said: > In contrast, participants with SARS-CoV-2 antibodies at baseline before the first vaccine injection rapidly developed uniform, high antibody titers within days after vaccination (median AUC before vaccination, 90 [43 participants]; >at 0 to 4 days, 133 [7 participants]; >at 5 to 8 days, 14,208 [15 participants]; >at 9 to 12 days, 20,783 [8 participants]; >at 13 to 16 days, 25,927 [20 participants]; >at 17 to 20 days, 11,755 [4 participants]; >at 21 to 27 days, 19,534 [14 participants]; and >after the second dose, 22,509 [19 participants]) [1] https://www.nejm.org/na101/home/literatum/publisher/mms/jour... |
Most notably, even those previously infected people with ~0 titers at baseline rapidly developed high levels of antibodies at 5-8 days after vaccination. It's a small group, but the rapid nature of the response is telling.
This data is clear that the infected people had a rapid, robust immune response to vaccination. It cannot tell you what you're trying to infer -- that the vaccination itself increased the immune response. To determine that, you'd need to do some other experiment.