Western Mail

Scientists devise dual blood test for Covid immunity

- MARK SMITH Health correspond­ent mark.smith@walesonlin­e.co.uk

ATEST to measure both the Tcell and antibody response to Covid-19 in a single blood sample has been developed by scientists at Cardiff University.

The unique approach can also be used to measure the immune response brought about by vaccinatio­n and previous infection.

It was developed in collaborat­ion with Wales-based biotechnol­ogy company ImmunoServ Ltd and is outlined in a study published in the journal Immunology.

Dr Martin Scurr, a research associate at Cardiff University’s School of Medicine and lead author on the study, said: “Covid-19 infection rates remain alarmingly high – and it is clear infection even after vaccinatio­n is an issue.

“To help control future outbreaks and identify at-risk individual­s, it is important to understand the exact make-up of the immune response to Covid.

“Our test accurately detects both the T-cell and antibody response to the virus in one blood sample. Together these indicators represent a powerful measure of immunity from Covid-19.

“The test can be made widely available, is easy to employ and cost-effective, and should play a very useful role in monitoring this pandemic, for instance by identifyin­g individual­s at greater need of booster jabs.”

Antibody testing was seen as crucial to easing lockdown during the pandemic – but antibodies are just one arm of the body’s immune response and in some individual­s this response is weak and shortlived.

Scientists believe T-cell immunity plays a much greater role in protecting people from future infection. However, large-scale testing has proved more challengin­g.

In this study, the researcher­s took a small sample of blood from individual­s of all ages, 68 with underlying cancer and 231 healthy donors. They stimulated T-cells with small pieces of the virus called peptides; the T-cells recognise these peptides if the individual has been previously infected (or vaccinated) and produce chemicals named cytokines which can be easily measured.

The study also monitored the size of the T-cell and antibody responses in a group of individual­s tested before, during and after the UK’s Covid-19 vaccinatio­n campaign. While both vaccine doses were required to maximise the T-cell response against the virus, the study found previously infected individual­s required only one dose to achieve comparable immune responses.

The test proved most useful in monitoring immune responses in patients considered more at risk from Covid-19, even after vaccinatio­n. The study found the second vaccine dose was essential for cancer patients. Among cancer patients recruited from Velindre Cancer Centre in Cardiff, two doses induced T-cell and antibody responses to equivalent levels as healthy donors.

However, it is clear that in some cancer patients there is a dramatic fall-off in immune responses at three months, not seen in healthy controls, which highlights the importance of monitoring these responses.

Professor Andrew Godkin, cosenior author from Cardiff University and the University Hospital of Wales, said: “Without this sort of informatio­n there is uncertaint­y around whether repeated booster vaccinatio­ns will be required in future, and who in particular will need them. This data is crucial for understand­ing how and when to offer re-vaccinatio­ns.”

The research team will also monitor whether T-cell and antibody responses induced by vaccinatio­n can protect against SARSCoV-2 mutant variants, including the Delta variant that is currently the most prevalent in the UK.

Danny Altmann, Professor of Immunology at Imperial University, said: “This study is important in both demonstrat­ing the ease of measuring immune responses using a whole-blood approach, but also the importance of monitoring susceptibl­e individual­s and healthy controls for difference­s in vaccine response and future potential loss of protection. Longterm monitoring will be crucial to understand this problem.”

The research was funded by UK Research and Innovation as part of its response to the pandemic, along with the Medical Research Council and Cancer Research Wales.

 ?? ?? > A new blood test could help scientists better understand the immune system’s response to Covid
> A new blood test could help scientists better understand the immune system’s response to Covid

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