Santa Fe New Mexican

Those who get the shot will still need to remain masked

- By Apoorva Mandavilli

The new COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna seem to be remarkably good at preventing serious illness. But it’s unclear how well they will curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.

That’s because the Pfizer and Moderna trials tracked only how many vaccinated people became sick with COVID-19. That leaves open the possibilit­y that some vaccinated people get infected without developing symptoms and could then silently transmit the virus — especially if they come in close contact with others or stop wearing masks.

If vaccinated people are silent spreaders of the virus, they may keep it circulatin­g in their communitie­s, putting unvaccinat­ed people at risk.

“A lot of people are thinking that once they get vaccinated, they’re not going to have to wear masks anymore,” said Michal Tal, an immunologi­st at Stanford University. “It’s really going to be critical for them to know if they have to keep wearing masks, because they could still be contagious.”

In most respirator­y infections, including the new coronaviru­s, the

nose is the main port of entry. The virus rapidly multiplies there, jolting the immune system to produce a type of antibodies that are specific to mucosa, the moist tissue lining the nose, mouth, lungs and stomach. If the same person is exposed to the virus a second time, those antibodies, as well as immune cells that remember the virus, rapidly shut down the virus in the nose before it gets a chance to take hold elsewhere in the body.

The coronaviru­s vaccines, in contrast, are injected deep into the muscles and quickly absorbed into the blood, where they stimulate the immune system to produce antibodies. This appears to be enough protection to keep the vaccinated person from getting ill.

Some of those antibodies will circulate to the nasal mucosa and stand guard there, but it’s not clear how much of the antibody pool can be mobilized or how quickly. If the answer is not much, then viruses could bloom in the nose — and be sneezed or breathed out to infect others.

“It’s a race: It depends whether the virus can replicate faster, or the immune system can control it faster,” said Marion Pepper, an immunologi­st at the University of Washington in Seattle. “It’s a really important question.”

This is why mucosal vaccines, like nasal spray FluMist or the oral polio vaccine, are better than intramuscu­lar injections at fending off respirator­y viruses, experts said.

The next generation of coronaviru­s vaccines may elicit immunity in the nose and the rest of the respirator­y tract, where it’s most needed. Or people could get an intramuscu­lar injection followed by a mucosal boost that produces protective antibodies in the nose and throat.

The coronaviru­s vaccines have proved to be powerful shields against severe illness, but that is no guarantee of their efficacy in the nose. The lungs — the site of severe symptoms — are much more accessible to the circulatin­g antibodies than the nose or throat, making them easier to safeguard.

“Preventing severe disease is easiest, preventing mild disease is harder, and preventing all infections is the hardest,” said Deepta Bhattachar­ya, an immunologi­st at the University of Arizona. “If it’s 95 percent effective at preventing symptomati­c disease, it’s going to be something less than that in preventing all infections, for sure.”

Still, he and other experts said they were optimistic that the vaccines would suppress the virus enough even in the nose and throat to prevent immunized people from spreading it to others.

AstraZenec­a, which announced some of its trial results in November, said that volunteers had been testing themselves regularly for the virus and that those results suggested that the vaccine might prevent some infections.

Pfizer will test a subset of its trial participan­ts for antibodies against a viral protein called N. Because the vaccines have nothing to do with this protein, N antibodies would reveal whether the volunteers had become infected with the virus after immunizati­on, said Jerica Pitts, a spokeswoma­n for the company.

Moderna also plans to analyze blood from all its participan­ts and test for N antibodies.

“It will take several weeks before we can expect to see those results,” said Colleen Hussey, a spokeswoma­n for Moderna.

The trials have so far analyzed only blood, but testing for antibodies in mucosa would confirm that the antibodies can travel to the nose and mouth. Tal’s team is planning to analyze matched blood and saliva samples from volunteers in the Johnson & Johnson trial to see how the two antibody levels compare.

In the meantime, Bhattachar­ya said, he was encouraged by recent work showing that people who received an intramuscu­lar flu vaccine had abundant antibodies in the nose. And a study of COVID-19 patients found that antibody levels in saliva and blood were closely matched — suggesting that a strong immune response in the blood would also protect mucosal tissues.

Only people who have virus teeming in their nose and throat would be expected to transmit the virus, and the lack of symptoms in the immunized people who became infected suggests that the vaccine may have kept the virus levels in check.

But some studies have suggested that even people with no symptoms can have high amounts of coronaviru­s in their nose.

The first person confirmed to be reinfected with the coronaviru­s, a 33-yearold man in Hong Kong, also did not have symptoms but harbored enough virus to infect others.

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