Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Coronaviru­s infection leads to immunity that’s comparable to a COVID-19 vaccine

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

One of the enduring questions of the

COVID-19 pandemic is how much immunity people are left with after recovering from a coronaviru­s infection. New research suggests the level of protection is comparable to getting a vaccine – at least for a few months.

Among a group of hundreds of thousands of Americans who tested positive for a SARS-COV-2 infection, the risk of developing a subsequent infection more than three months later was about 90% lower than for people who had not been previously infected and therefore had no immunity to the virus, according to researcher­s from the National Cancer Institute.

For the sake of comparison, when the vaccines made by PfizerBion­tech and Moderna were tested in Phase 3 clinical trials, they reduced the risk of developing COVID-19 by at least 94%.

The findings, published Wednesday in JAMA Internal Medicine, could help inform plans for returning workers to their offices, sending students and teachers back to school campuses and allowing more of the economy to reopen.

“I think we knew this, that immunity [after natural infection] lasts a long time,” said Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious­disease specialist at UC

San Francisco who was not involved in the new research. “But it’s still very exciting.”

There are three important things scientists need to know to understand the biological value of coronaviru­s antibodies, said Dr. Mitchell H. Katz, who leads NYC Health and Hospitals. They are: Do antibodies protect against infection? Can they be reliably detected with current tests? And, if they do offer some protection, how long does it last?

The new study “provides reassuring answers to the first and second questions,” Katz wrote in an editor’s note that accompanie­d the study.

To investigat­e coronaviru­s immunity, the cancer researcher­s examined the results of more than 3 million blood tests administer­ed to Americans between the start of the pandemic and Aug. 23. A total of 378,606 of those tests were positive for SARS-COV-2 antibodies – a sign that the person who provided the sample had an active coronaviru­s infection.

Among the millions of people who were tested, some – about 11% of those who tested positive and 9.5% of those who tested negative – later took a different test to look for evidence of the coronaviru­s’ genetic material in patient samples, which are typically gathered via the nose, throat or from saliva.

The researcher­s used these results to see whether people who’d had a coronaviru­s infection were any less likely than their uninfected counterpar­ts to have SARS-COV-2 particles in their system. For their analysis, they sorted the results into four groups based on the gap between the antibody test and the genetic test.

After running the numbers, the researcher­s found that between 3% and 4% of those who originally tested negative for coronaviru­s antibodies later tested positive with the genetic test. This was true across all four time intervals: 0 to 30 days, 31 to 60 days, 61 to 90 days and more than 90 days. The consistenc­y was probably a reflection of the relatively stable rate at which people in their communitie­s were being infected at the time, the researcher­s said.

Contrast that to the people who originally tested positive for coronaviru­s antibodies. Their genetic test results were positive at very high rates in the first

30 days (11.3%), which the researcher­s said was probably a sign that leftover viral particles were still being flushed from their systems.

However, the positivity rate for the genetic test plunged to 2.7% in the second month after infection, then fell to 1.1% in the third month. And after those 90 days, only 0.3% of people with a past coronaviru­s infection had another infection that was detected with a genetic test.

That coronaviru­s infection rate was 10 times lower than for the people who presumably had not been previously infected.

That level of protection appears to be comparable to the benefits offered by the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines in their clinical trials, the study authors pointed out.

“Of course, protection induced by a safe vaccine is clearly preferable,” they were quick to add, “as the population-wide risk of a serious outcome from an authorized or approved vaccine is expected to be orders of magnitude lower than that from natural infection.”

Though the findings may be of great interest to scientists, it’s unlikely they’ll make much practical difference at this stage of the pandemic, Gandhi said. That’s because vaccines appear to be at least as protective as a past infection, and they’re already being rolled out.

These findings “could have been used two months ago,” she added.

While this study didn’t gauge how long the benefits of a prior infection last beyond 90 days, other lines of evidence suggest it takes a while to wane. For instance, Gandhi pointed to a paper in Science that found that immune cells triggered by SARS-COV-2 remained in the body for at least eight months.

The findings may help explain why new infections have been falling in Los Angeles County in the wake of a devastatin­g holiday surge. Dr. Roger Lewis, director of COVID-19 hospital demand modeling for the L.A. County Department of Health Services, estimated that about 1 out of 3 people in the county now has immunity to the coronaviru­s.

Still, the study authors said more research would be necessary to get a clearer picture about natural immunity to the coronaviru­s.

“Factors that influence reinfectio­n risk – such as varying viral strains, patients’ immune status, or other patient-level characteri­stics – should be evaluated in subsequent studies that include followup beyond 90 days,” they wrote.

 ?? Tribune News Service/orlando Sentinel ?? Drive-thru coronaviru­s testing site by the Florida Department of Health in Orange County at Camping World Stadium in April 2020.
Tribune News Service/orlando Sentinel Drive-thru coronaviru­s testing site by the Florida Department of Health in Orange County at Camping World Stadium in April 2020.

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