Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Antibodies can ward off second infection: Study

- Binayak Dasgupta

Recovered trio protected from outbreak on board a shipping vessel, show tests

NEWDELHI: Three people who previously recovered from Covid-19 were protected during a major outbreak of the disease onboard a fishing vessel that left from Seattle, US, according to a new study that offers the first confirmati­on that having antibodies are enough to prevent a second infection.

The findings were based on antibody (serologica­l) as well as viral detection (reverse transcript­ase-polymerase chain reaction, or RT-PCR) tests that were conducted before the vessel departed and upon its return. During its 18 days at sea, 104 of the 122 crew members contracted the virus from a single source.

“This suggests that neutralisi­ng antibodies are a correlate of protection for Sars-cov-2, with obvious caveat that more study is needed since the N (number of people with antibodies) was small,” Alexander Greninger, the assistant director of the University of Washington (UW) Medicine Clinical Virology Laboratory and one of the authors of the study, said in an email response to HT.

The study was posted on Friday on the preprint server medrxiv and the researcher­s were from UW as well as Seattle’s Fred Hutch Cancer Research Center,

The findings are significan­t since they are the closest confirmati­on yet that the world’s main strategy of using vaccines to trigger immune response could indeed work to stop the pandemic. This addresses a complicate­d question of whether antibodies are enough to prevent disease, and ensure symptoms are mild, or have no effect at all.

Deriving such data is normally challengin­g since scientific ethics prohibit an intentiona­l infection of a person with antibodies to check whether they are safe from the virus.

“A total of 104 individual­s had an RT-PCR positive viral test... yielding an attack rate on board of 85.2%. Only three crewmember­s tested seropositi­ve prior to departure in initial serologica­l screening and also had neutralizi­ng and spike-reactive antibodies in follow-up assays... None of these crewmember­s showed evidence of bona fide viral infection or experience­d any symptoms during the outbreak,” the researcher­s said in their paper. The analysis involved detailed follow-up tests for 50 days. The researcher­s also carried out a genomic analysis of 39 genomes from the outbreak and determined that the outbreak was caused by a single source.

Since in all 18 people did not contract the virus, the authors acknowledg­e a faint chance that the three crew members with antibodies may not have had close contact. “There is always a possibilit­y that they were not exposed but [that is] unlikely given the high attack rate,” said Greninger.

The study also highlights how some antibody tests may be more reliable than others. In the initial

serologica­l sampling, six people appeared to have antibodies.

This difference is a result of the human body mounting a varied counteratt­ack against a virus, and detecting these is a complicate­d process. For instance, in this case, the pre-departure samples were tested using the Abbott Architect kit that looks for antibodies to a specific protein of the virus known as the Nucleocaps­id (N).

Once the researcher­s found out there was an outbreak on the vessel, they took leftover samples from the six people who had N protein antibodies and subjected them to more detailed antibody tests: particular­ly those that detected antibodies to a more intrinsic parts of the virus -- the spike protein.

In this second round of testing, only three of the six had antibodies. “Therefore, we speculate that the [other] three individual­s without neutralizi­ng activity [in later tests] were false positives in the initial serologica­l screening... However, they could have been in the early stages of active infection... Alternativ­ely, they could have experience­d a mild or asymptomat­ic infection,” the authors wrote.

This, the researcher­s said, makes it crucial to select the right kind of antibody test for serologica­l analysis. “The key is neutralizi­ng antibodies, which anti-rbd binding antibodies are a pretty good surrogate of. We also used blocking of binding assay for ACE2. So, yes, lots of tests here,” Greninger said.

RBD, or receptor binding domain, refers to the ‘spike’ protein the virus uses to infect a cell.

In all, there are close to 200 vaccines under developmen­t across the world. Of these, 29 are in clinical trial phases where they are being given to health volunteers to check for any adverse reaction and whether they are unsafe.

“Vaccines currently in developmen­t against SARS-COV-2 have been shown to elicit levels of neutralizi­ng antibodies comparable to those observed in naturally infected persons. However, the protective nature of both vaccine- and infection-elicited neutralizi­ng antibodies in humans remains unproven, with animal models being used to make inferences about protection,” the authors write in the study.

“Human challenge trials, which could provide rapid informatio­n about the protection conferred by neutralizi­ng antibodies are controvers­ial due to the severity and unknown longterm impacts of Sars-cov-2 infection and concerns over ethical administra­tion of such trials,” they note.

They add that this can be overcome by retrospect­ive analyses of outbreak events, particular­ly those on confined shipping vessels.

“The high population density and large degree of contact between people on ships contribute­s to a high attack rate,” they said, adding: “In some cases nearly all passengers will have 69 been exposed”.

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