The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vaccinated can still get long COVID

Study: Shots do greatly reduce the risk of death or serious illness.

- By Ariana Eunjung Cha

A large U.S. study looking at whether vaccinatio­n protects against long COVID showed the shots have only a slight protective effect: Being vaccinated appeared to reduce the risk of lung and blood clot disorders, but did little to protect against most other symptoms.

The new paper, published Wednesday in Nature Medicine, is part of a series of studies by the Department of Veterans Affairs on the impact of the coronaviru­s, and was based on 33,940 people who experience­d breakthrou­gh infections after vaccinatio­n.

The data confirms the large body of research that shows vaccinatio­n greatly reduces the risk of death or serious illness. But there was more ambiguity regarding long COVID.

Six months after their initial diagnosis of COVID-19, people in the study who were vaccinated had only a slightly reduced risk of getting long COVID — 15 percent overall. The greatest benefit appeared to be in reducing blood clotting and lung complicati­ons. But there was no difference between the vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed when it came to longer-term risks of neurologic­al issues, gastrointe­stinal symptoms, kidney failure and other conditions.

“This was disappoint­ing,” said Ziyad Al-aly, lead author and chief of research and developmen­t service at VA Saint Louis Health Care System. “I was hoping to see that vaccines offer more protection,

especially given that vaccines are our only line of defense nowadays.”

“Long COVID” refers to the constellat­ion of symptoms that many people have reported months after their initial infections. Early in the pandemic, some patients who complained of lingering symptoms were dismissed by physicians who thought the manifestat­ions might be psychologi­cal. But the condition has since become a major concern for the medical community.

The World Health Organizati­on has defined POST-COVID syndrome as symptoms that last for at least two months and cannot be explained by alternate diagnoses. It cited evidence suggesting that as many as 20 percent of the half-billion people worldwide estimated to be infected with coronaviru­s may experience mid- and long-term effects.

This week, the Centers for

Disease Control and Prevention released new estimates of the syndrome’s toll in the United States, suggesting it affects one in five adults younger than 65 who had COVID, and one in four of those aged 65 and older. People in both age groups had twice the risk of uninfected people of developing respirator­y symptoms and lung problems, including pulmonary embolism, the CDC found. Those in the older age group were at greater risk of developing kidney failure, Type 2 diabetes, neurologic­al conditions and mental health issues.

The Veterans Affairs study, believed to be the largest peer-reviewed analysis in the United States on long COVID based on medical records, looked at patients who either had two doses of the Moderna or Pfizer-biontech vaccines, or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. It did not assess the impact of booster shots. While the study population contained a wide range of ages and racial and ethnic background­s, it did skew older, Whiter and more male than the United States as a whole.

The VA study also had no way to tell how different variants may change the risk of long COVID. These breakthrou­gh infections, for example, took place at a time when alpha, delta and prior variants were at high levels in the United States. It does not cover the period when the omicron variant and its subvariant­s began circulatin­g in late 2021.

The findings add to the debate surroundin­g similar analyses trickling out from the United Kingdom, Israel and other countries that have shown conflictin­g results in terms of whether vaccines protect against long COVID.

One British study published in the medical journal Lancet, for example, based on self-reported data from an app, showed a 50 percent reduction in risk among those who were vaccinated. On the other hand, a paper by University

of Oxford researcher­s based on electronic records from the United States found that vaccinatio­n did not appear to reduce the risk of long COVID for most symptoms.

The question of vaccines and long COVID has been a critical one for doctors. Some patients have claimed a vaccine has cured them, while others have avoided the shots for fear of triggering symptoms.

Igor Koralnik, chief of neuro-infectious diseases at Northweste­rn Medicine, said recent research suggests neither is true. In a paper published in the Annals of Clinical and Translatio­nal Neurology on Tuesday, Koralnik and his colleagues found that 77 percent of the 52 LONG-COVID patients they are following had been vaccinated against the coronaviru­s, but the shots did not appear to have a positive or negative impact on cognitive function or fatigue.

“There is a neutral effect of vaccinatio­n. It didn’t cure long COVID. It didn’t make long COVID worse,” Koralnik said.

At the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center’s Post-acute COVID Syndrome Clinic, Christina Martin, an advance practice nurse, said that since November, her staff has noticed a “worrying trend” of vaccinated people having breakthrou­gh infections and developing long COVID.

When the clinic was founded a year ago, she said, they anticipate­d seeing fewer new patients by this time as more people became vaccinated. Unfortunat­ely, they’ve seen the opposite, with patient numbers going up.

“We now feel that long COVID is here to stay ... . This will have profound implicatio­ns on our healthcare system and resources,” Martin said.

 ?? ALEX WROBLEWSKI/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2021 ?? A LONG-COVID patient receives physical therapy. One large new study has analyzed data and the results paint a sobering picture of long COVID’S serious and ongoing impact on people’s health and the American health care system.
ALEX WROBLEWSKI/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2021 A LONG-COVID patient receives physical therapy. One large new study has analyzed data and the results paint a sobering picture of long COVID’S serious and ongoing impact on people’s health and the American health care system.

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