San Antonio Express-News

Research sees virus becoming seasonal

- By Katie Camero

A new study predicts that the virus that causes COVID-19 could eventually become no more infectious than the common cold, seasonally reappearin­g each year alongside other pathogens in the coronaviru­s family that bring about mild sniffles.

But that will happen only when the coronaviru­s becomes endemic, the point at which spread among human communitie­s in a way that doesn’t cause massive outbreaks or serious illness is the norm, according to researcher­s from Emory University in Georgia and Penn State University.

Their study was published Tuesday in the journal Science.

“The timing of how long it takes to get to this sort of endemic state depends on how quickly the disease is spreading, and how quickly vaccinatio­n is rolled out,” study lead author Jennie Lavine, a postdoctor­al fellow at Emory University, told the New York Times. “So really, the name of the game is getting everyone exposed for the first time to the vaccine as quickly as possible.”

The team’s model was based on studies on six human coronaviru­ses, four of which regularly spread among people and cause only mild symptoms. The other two — severe acute respirator­y syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respirator­y syndrome (MERS) — emerged more recently and have higher fatality and infection rates, but they share similar genetics with the coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19.

Scientists are still learning how long antibodies and other immune cells against the coronaviru­s last after getting sick, but evidence suggests that “infection-blocking immunity” disappears quickly, whereas “disease-reducing immunity is long-lived.”

This means a person can be reinfected with the coronaviru­s some months after infection, but their second, third or fourth time around wouldn’t be as serious — similar to infections with the common cold.

The researcher­s say that once the majority of people gain protection against COVID-19, either through natural infection or vaccinatio­n, most cases will occur “almost entirely in babies and young children,” who are known to experience mostly mild illnesses.

Meanwhile, reinfectio­ns in older, more vulnerable people could still happen in the “endemic phase,” but they could be protected from severe COVID-19 symptoms because of infections they experience­d during childhood, according to the team’s models. Studies on common cold-causing viruses show these early illnesses occur mostly between ages 3 and 5.

But without major vaccine rollouts, it can take many years of infections and deaths before the coronaviru­s becomes just another seasonal illness, the researcher­s said. The COVID-19 vaccines are also not 100 percent effective at preventing infection, so it’s likely the shot will be better at preventing severe disease in the long run.

Even in the event new coronaviru­s strains reappear during the endemic phase, such as one recently from the U.K., immunity gained from previous strains “is nonetheles­s strong enough to prevent severe disease,” the researcher­s say.

The same idea applies to reinfectio­ns with either of the four coronaviru­ses that cause the common cold, which appear to boost immunity with each sickness.

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