Las Vegas Review-Journal

Vaccinated people can get COVID, but it’s most likely rare

- By Denise Grady

More than two months after he was fully vaccinated against COVID, a doctor in New York woke up with a headache and a dull, heavy feeling of fatigue. A fever and chills soon followed, and his senses of taste and smell began to fade.

This, he thought, could not be happening. But it was: He tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

“It was a huge shock,” he said. He knew that no vaccine was perfect and that the Pfizer-biontech shots he received had been found 95% effective in a large clinical trial. “But somehow in my mind, it was 100%,” he said.

The doctor, who requested anonymity to protect his privacy, is among the few reported cases of people who have been infected after being partly or even fully vaccinated.more than 83 million Americans have received at least one dose of a COVID vaccine, and it is unclear just how many of them will have a “breakthrou­gh” infection, though two new reports suggest the number is very small.

One study found that just 4 out of 8,121 fully vaccinated employees at the University of Texas Southweste­rn Medical Center in Dallas became infected. The other found that only 7 out of 14,990 workers at UC San Diego Health and the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA tested positive two or more weeks after receiving a second dose of either the Pfizer-biontech or Moderna vaccines. Both reports, published Tuesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, show how well the vaccines work in the real world, and during a period of intense transmissi­on.

But these breakthrou­gh cases, though quite rare, are a sharp reminder that vaccinated people are not invincible, especially

when the virus continues to circulate widely.

“We felt really strongly that this data should not lead people to say, ‘Let’s all get vaccinated and then we can all stop wearing masks,’” said Dr. Francesca J. Torriani, an infectious disease specialist at UC San Diego Health who led the California study. “These measures have to continue until a larger segment of the population is vaccinated.”

Only some of the Covid-positive health workers in the California study showed symptoms, she said, and they tended to be mild, suggesting that the vaccines were protective. That echoes data from the vaccine trials indicating that breakthrou­gh infections were mild and did not require hospitaliz­ations.

Some people had no symptoms at all, and were discovered only through testing in studies or as part of their medical care.

For example, doctors at the University of North Carolina found a few asymptomat­ic cases in vaccinated patients who were tested for the coronaviru­s before surgery or other medical procedures, according to Dr. David Wohl, the medical director of that center’s vaccine clinic.

He said the absence of symptoms may have meant that the vaccine was doing exactly what it was supposed to do: prevent people from getting sick, even if it does not fully block the virus from infecting them.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has a small team studying breakthrou­gh cases, said an agency spokeswoma­n, Kristen Nordlund. One question the researcher­s are considerin­g is whether particular variants of the coronaviru­s might play a role in breakthrou­gh cases.

“Currently, there is no evidence that COVID-19 after vaccinatio­n is occurring because of changes in the virus,” Nordlund said.

In the next few months, Pfizer and Moderna are expected to release data that should indicate how often vaccinated people become infected by the virus, even if they have no symptoms. The companies have been testing participan­ts in their vaccine trials for antibodies to a protein called N that is part of the coronaviru­s but not part of the vaccine. Finding those antibodies means that a vaccinated person has been infected by the virus. Some volunteers from the studies are also having their noses swabbed regularly to test for an active viral infection.

Another question is how effective the vaccines are in people whose immune systems have been weakened by illness or medication­s, said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University. Breakthrou­gh cases might occur in those people because their bodies cannot produce a robust reaction to a vaccine.

“And it is amazing how pervasive immunocomp­romise is,” Schaffner said. He called the condition “a testament to modern medicine,” because many patients with it are being treated successful­ly for conditions that not so long ago would have killed them.

The doctor who became ill in New York despite full vaccinatio­n stayed in isolation at home for nearly two weeks. He described his illness as relatively mild, and said he was treated with monoclonal antibodies to fight the virus. “If the worst flu is a 10, this was a four,” he said.

Without the vaccine, he said, he believes he would have been sicker.

“I would have been in fear for my mortality,” he said. “But I didn’t have a moment’s anxiety. I did not think I was going to die. Thinking you’re not going to die — that’s a pretty big thing.”

 ?? JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Registered nurse Myesha Williams injects Gliceria Abrenilla with her first dose of the Pfizer-biontech COVID-19 vaccine Feb. 26 in San Jose, Calif. More than 83 million Americans have received at least one dose of a COVID vaccine, and it’s unclear just how many of them will have a “breakthrou­gh” infection, though two new reports suggest the number is very small.
JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES Registered nurse Myesha Williams injects Gliceria Abrenilla with her first dose of the Pfizer-biontech COVID-19 vaccine Feb. 26 in San Jose, Calif. More than 83 million Americans have received at least one dose of a COVID vaccine, and it’s unclear just how many of them will have a “breakthrou­gh” infection, though two new reports suggest the number is very small.

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