The Daily Courier

Vaccines still effective against new variants

- KEITH ROACH To Your Good Health Readers may email questions to ToYourGood­Health@med.cornell.edu

DEAR DR. ROACH: I would like to ask you a basic question about COVID19 booster shots, since no health authority seems to answer it directly. Why should I get a booster if the booster is based on the original alpha version of the virus from more than two years ago? Even if the booster shot were based on the delta variant, that variant passed through a long time ago. I had my two main Pfizer shots last summer while delta was raging, but now that the virus has morphed into weaker variants, the booster shot does not seem relevant or necessary. People are back to doing things in large groups, and if you get the virus, most likely you’ll get just mild, cold-like symptoms. So, why get a booster shot now if it won’t be effective against current variants?

– Puzzled by variants ANSWER: You should consider a COVID-19 booster because it still provides protection against serious illness. People with at least three doses of the mRNA vaccine (Pfizer or Moderna) have more than 99 per cent protection against disease serious enough to require hospitaliz­ation. People who have not been vaccinated at all are still dying of COVID, and among survivors, persistent COVID symptoms can be activity-limiting.

At the time of this writing, BA.2 is the dominant subvariant of omicron, but BA.4 and BA.5 are gaining ground. The vaccine manufactur­ers are working on omicron-specific vaccines, as well as vaccines that are intended to be effective for all variants. Preliminar­y data on the omicron-specific vaccines show there is incrementa­l benefit. For now, we are left with what we have, and these are still effective.

DEAR DR. ROACH: My total cholestero­l levels in the past five years have ranged between 216 and 250, with LDL between 75 and 90, and HDL between 118 and 156. Medical profession­als have remarked about the HDL numbers being so high. That has led them to assume that even though I have a family history of heart disease, because my HDL is so high, I am somehow “protected” or at a lesser risk of heart disease or heart attack. My mother had a high HDL but still needed bypass surgery. Despite that, my current primary care put me on 5 mg of Crestor, then switched me to 10 mg several years ago. I have tolerated it well. I am now 75 and in really good health, taking only rosuvastat­in. I was hoping you might have more informatio­n about HDL and what it means to my health. – Questionin­g meds

ANSWER: High levels of HDL cholestero­l are normally associated with low risk of heart disease. I suspect you have a variant type of HDL cholestero­l that is not protective against heart disease. It’s uncommon but not rare.

Your case shows the need to look at the whole picture. Family history is not in the major guidelines for predicting risk, but with your situation, there is a disconnect between your cholestero­l numbers and your family risk.

I am not sure if your primary care doctor was aware of these families with high HDL and high heart disease risk, but I agree completely with the treatment with a statin drug.

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