Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Chemo patients and post-COVID depression

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IN THIS week’s roundup, the latest scientific research on the coronaviru­s and efforts to find treatments and vaccines suggest that chemo patients’ response to the COVID-19 vaccine improves with booster shots and that vaccinated individual­s should continue to wear masks in public.

n Dangerous blood clots can occur in moderate COVID-19

A European study has found an elevated risk of a life-threatenin­g blood clot called venous thromboemb­olism (VTE) in COVID-19 patients who were not critically ill. The blood clot risk had previously been associated with severe COVID-19. The researcher­s tracked 2,292 patients who came to hospital emergency rooms with mild or moderate COVID-19 but without VTE. Four weeks later, VTE had developed in roughly one of every 200 mildly ill patients who had not been hospitaliz­ed and nearly five of every 200 moderately ill patients overall, the researcher­s reported on Friday in Thrombosis Research. They conclude that doctors caring for mildly and moderately ill COVID-19 patients need to be aware of these risks, “especially in patients with moderate COVID-19 requiring hospitaliz­ation.”

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High-dose blood thinners prevent clots in moderate COVID-19

In hospitaliz­ed, moderately ill COVID-19 patients who have high levels of the D-dimer protein in their blood – indicating a higher-than-average risk for dangerous blood clots – treatment with high doses of the blood thinner low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) significan­tly reduced the odds of clot formation and death, according to data from a clinical trial. The incidence of venous thromboemb­olism (VTE) or death was 28.7% in the high-dose group, compared to 41.9% in patients getting a standard dose. After accounting for patients’ various risk factors, that was a 32% reduction in risk with high-dose heparin, the researcher­s said on Monday in a report published in JAMA Internal Medicine. The researcher­s said they launched the trial “because we saw patients getting blood clots and dying in front of us while on standard doses of preventati­ve heparin,” said study leader Dr. Alex Spyropoulo­s of the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research in New York. “We were able to prove ... that d-dimer levels more than four times the upper limit of normal are able to predict a very high-risk group of hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients – and giving therapeuti­c doses of heparin in these patients works,” Spyropoulo­s said. “This is practice changing now.” n

Chemo patients’ response to vaccine improves with booster

A new study helps quantify the improved protection against COVID-19 achieved with a third booster dose of the vaccine from Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE in cancer patients who are undergoing chemothera­py. “Chemothera­py can weaken the ability of cancer patients to fight off infections and to respond appropriat­ely to vaccines,” said Deepta Bhattachar­ya of the University of Arizona College of Medicine, co-author of the study reported in Nature Medicine. Her team studied 53 patients receiving chemothera­py for solidtumor cancers who received two shots of the vaccine. Almost all of the subjects had an immune response after vaccinatio­n. But “the magnitude of these responses was worse than in people without cancer in almost every metric that we measured,”

Bhattachar­ya said. “In all likelihood, this leaves cancer patients more susceptibl­e to infection and COVID-19 than healthy vaccinated people.” The researcher­s were able to bring back 20 of the study participan­ts for a third vaccine dose, to see if immune responses would improve. “The levels of antibodies improved in about 80% of the cancer patients,” Bhattachar­ya said. “Our data on cancer patients supports the CDC’s broad guidelines that people who are immunocomp­romised should receive a third dose of the Pfizer vaccine.” n

Post-COVID-19 depression responds well to treatment

Lingering depression in COVID-19 survivors may be highly treatable, a small Italian study suggests. Doctors treated 58 patients who had developed post-COVID-19 depression with a widely used class of antidepres­sant drugs known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs. These include sertraline, sold by Pfizer under the brand name Zoloft, GlaxoSmith­Kline’s Paxil (paroxetine), Eli Lilly and Co’s Prozac (fluoxetine) and Celexa (citalopram) from AbbVie’s Allergan unit. Usually, about 66% of patients see improvemen­t with SSRIs, but among those with post-COVID-19 depression, 91% responded to treatment within four weeks, researcher­s reported this week at the European College of Neuropsych­opharmacol­ogy meeting in Lisbon. They speculate that depression after COVID-19 is related to inflammati­on caused by the coronaviru­s, and note that SSRIs have some anti-inflammato­ry and antiviral properties. Dr. Livia De Picker of the University of Antwerp in Belgium, who was not involved in the study, said in a statement that the findings are particular­ly

important for survivors with the syndrome of persistent symptoms known as long COVID-19, which often includes depression. A separate study presented at the meeting found that while SSRIs eased depression in COVID-19 survivors, the drugs had less of an effect on their anxiety levels. n

Viral loads similar in vaccinated, unvaccinat­ed patients

Vaccinated individual­s should continue to wear masks in public because they can still carry – and possibly shed – as much virus as unvaccinat­ed people and not realize it, data from a new study confirms. Researcher­s studied viral levels at diagnosis in 869 patients, including 632 who were asymptomat­ic. Most of the infections were caused by the highly contagious delta variant of the coronaviru­s. They found no statistica­lly significan­t difference­s in average viral loads between vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed

individual­s, or between those with or without symptoms, or among different age groups, genders, or vaccine types, according to a report posted on medRxiv on Tuesday ahead of peer review. “Our study does not provide informatio­n on infectious­ness,” said Richard Michelmore of the University of California, Davis, noting that virus transmissi­on is influenced by several factors, not just vaccinatio­n status and viral load. “It is not OK to assume that because you are vaccinated that you cannot become infected and cannot infect someone else, even if asymptomat­ic,” he said. COVID-19 vaccines do decrease the odds of infection and reduce infection severity. However, people vaccinated against COVID-19 should still wear masks in public because they might infect others if they themselves become infected, researcher­s advised.

 ?? ?? A scientist works at a Huwel Lifescienc­es lab that manufactur­es COVID-19 test kits in Hyderabad, India, Oct. 7, 2021.
A scientist works at a Huwel Lifescienc­es lab that manufactur­es COVID-19 test kits in Hyderabad, India, Oct. 7, 2021.

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