South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Kids may clear virus faster than adults

Study: Children produce weaker, fewer antibodies

- By Apoorva Mandavilli

Children infected with the coronaviru­s produce weaker antibodies and fewer types of them than adults do, suggesting they clear their infection much faster, according to a new study published this month.

Other studies have suggested that an overly strong immune response may be to blame in people who get severely ill or die from COVID-19. A weaker immune response in children may paradoxica­lly indicate that theyvanqui­shthe virus before it has had a chance to wreak havoc in the body, and may help explain why children are mostly spared severe symptoms of the disease caused by the coronaviru­s. It may also show why they are less likely to spread the virus to others.

“They may be infectious for a shorter time,” said Donna Farber, an immunologi­st atColumbia­University in New York who led the study reported in the journal Nature Immunology.

Havingweak­er and fewer antibodies does not mean that childrenwo­uld be more at risk of reinfectio­ns, other experts said.

“You don’t really need a huge, overly robust immune responseto maintainpr­otections over some period of time,” said Deepta Bhattachar­ya, an immunologi­st at the University of Arizona. “I don’t know that I would be especially worried that kids have a little bit lower antibody response.”

The study looked at children’s antibody levels at a single point in time, andwas too small to provide insights into howthe levels may vary with age. But it could pose questions for certain antibody tests that may bemiss

ing children who have been infected.

Farber and her colleagues analyzed antibodies to the coronaviru­s in four groups of patients: 19 adult convalesce­nt plasma donors who had recovered from COVID without being hospitaliz­ed; 13 adults hospitaliz­ed with acute respirator­y distress syndrome resulting from severe COVID; 16 children hospitaliz­ed with multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome, the rare condition affecting some infected children; and 31 infected children who did not have the syndrome. About half of this last group of children had no symptoms.

Individual­s in each group had antibodies, consistent with other studies showing that the vast majority of people infected with the coronaviru­s mount a robust immune response.

“This further emphasizes that this viral infection in itself, and the immune response to this virus, is not that different from what we would expect” from any virus, said Petter Brodin, an immunologi­st at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm.

But the range of antibodies differed between children and adults. The children made primarily one type of antibody, called IgG, that recognizes the spike protein on the surface of the virus. Adults, by contrast, made several types of antibodies to the spike and other viral proteins, and these antibodies were more powerful at neutralizi­ng the virus.

Children had “less of a protective response, but they also had less of a breadth of an antibody response,” Farber said. “It’s because those kids are just

not getting infected as severely.”

Neither group of children had antibodies to a viral protein called the nucleocaps­id, or N, that is entangledw­iththe genetic material of the virus. Because this protein is found within the virus and not on its surface, the immune system would only see it and make antibodies to it if the virus were widely disseminat­ed in the body, she said.

“You don’t really see any of that in the children, and that suggests that there’s really a reduced infection course if these kids are getting infected,” she said.

The finding could undermine the results from tests designed to pick up antibodies to the N protein of the virus. Many antibody tests, including those made by Abbott and Roche and offered by Quest Diagnostic­s

and LabCorp, are specific to theNantibo­dies and somay miss childrenwh­o have successful­ly cleared the virus.

Lower levels of virus in the body would also explain why children seem generally to transmit the virus less efficientl­y than adults do.

But experts urged some caution in interpreti­ng the results because they represent samples taken from people at a single point in time.

Samples from the more severely affected children and adults were collected within 24 to 36 hours of being admitted or intubated for respirator­y failure; those from children with mild or no symptoms were banked after medical procedures.

The type of antibodies produced by the body varies over the time course of an infection. This was a limitation of this study because

the researcher­s may have been comparing people at different points in their infection, Brodin said.

Other experts cautioned that the study was too small to draw conclusion­s about how the immune response may vary in children of different ages. The children in the study ranged in age from 3 to 18 years, with a median age of 11. But some studies have suggested that teenagers may be just as much at risk from the coronaviru­s as adults.

“It’s very important to understand­whathappen­s in children,” to understand the nature of their illness, but also how they contribute to spread of the virus in the community, said Dr. Maria Gennaro, an immunologi­st atRutgersU­niversity.

But “to try and stratify by age, it’s a little bit of a stretch in the analysis,” she said.

 ?? KENDRICK BRINSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A recently published study may help explain why many kids don’t become seriously ill from COVID-19. Above, a closed playground in July in Los Angeles.
KENDRICK BRINSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES A recently published study may help explain why many kids don’t become seriously ill from COVID-19. Above, a closed playground in July in Los Angeles.

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