Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Breakthrou­gh cases’ crop up in Nevada

58 people contract COVID despite full vaccinatio­n

- By Michael Scott Davidson

Dozens of Nevadans who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 have tested positive for the disease, something state health officials had anticipate­d.

Of the 58 cases, it is not publicly known how ill people with the rare “breakthrou­gh cases” have become, or which novel coronaviru­s strain they have. Health officials did not disclose which vaccines had been administer­ed in those cases, but they said most had occurred in Clark County.

Nevada and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention define a breakthrou­gh case as a person testing positive for COVID-19 two or

more weeks after a final vaccine dose.

What is clear is that the cases represent a minuscule fraction of the more than half-million vaccinatio­ns completed in Nevada, according to data from the state’s Department of Health and Human Services.

“At this time, these breakthrou­gh cases are below what the Department statistica­lly expected to see based on the initial data available on vaccine efficacy,” department spokeswoma­n Shannon Litz wrote in an email.

The department’s Office of Public Health Investigat­ions is analyzing the cases, Litz added.

None of the three COVID-19 vaccines available to Nevadans — Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson — claim to completely stop disease transmissi­on.

Instead, they prevent severe illness, hospitaliz­ation and death at least 97 percent of the time, Litz said. Their effectiven­ess in preventing infection ranges from 70 to 95 percent.

While they aren’t perfect, the vaccines offer the best protection we have against COVID-19, said Dr. Mark Riddle, a professor of internal medicine at the University of Nevada, Reno. They should also be paired with other preventati­ve measures, like washing your hands and wearing a face mask, while COVID-19 is still circulatin­g in our communitie­s.

“We can’t predict that you’re going to have a bad outcome or a not-bad outcome,” Riddle said. “Given that unpredicta­bility right now, you need to err on the side of caution.”

Riddle said the breakthrou­gh cases should be examined for similariti­es that could help explain why they are occurring. There could be common threads, such as if most of those infected received the same vaccine, tested positive for the same COVID-19 variant or had the same underlying health conditions.

So far, Nevada health officials don’t have specifics available for the public.

“(The state) is working with Nevada’s Local Health Authoritie­s, the Nevada State Public Health Laboratory and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to enhance the reporting and support the analysis of these cases,” Litz wrote in an email.

Breakthrou­gh cases are appearing in other states. News reports this week show at least 246 fully vaccinated Michigan residents were diagnosed with the virus — 11 were hospitaliz­ed and three died. In South Carolina, more than 140 breakthrou­gh cases have been reported, and in Utah, health officials confirmed there were 97 cases among the 521,000 fully vaccinated Utahns. As of March 30, Washington state health officials had reported 102 cases, and 97 were reported in Idaho.

Informatio­n on vaccinatio­n sites can be found at Nvcovidfig­hter.org. For assistance making an appointmen­t, call 800-401-0946.

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