The Guardian Australia

Are pockets of Covid in the gut causing longterm symptoms?

- Linda Geddes Science correspond­ent

Since the early days of the pandemic it has been clear some people shed genetic material from the virus in their stools for months after catching Covid-19. The findings were initially regarded as a curiosity, but there is mounting evidence to support the idea that persistent pockets of coronaviru­s – in the gut, or elsewhere – may be contributi­ng to long Covid.

Earlier this month, Prof David R Walt and colleagues at Harvard Medical School announced that they had detected Sars-CoV-2 proteins – most commonly the viral spike protein – in the blood of 65% of the long Covid patients they tested, up to 12 months after they were first diagnosed.

Though small and preliminar­y, the study provides some of the most compelling evidence yet for the idea that reservoirs of the virus could be contributi­ng to people’s long-term ill health. “The half-life of spike protein in the body is pretty short, so its presence indicates that there must be some kind of active viral reservoir,” Walt said.

Spike protein wasn’t detected in the blood of Covid patients who didn’t have ongoing symptoms.

Walt was motivated to carry out the study after earlier research by his colleagues detected genetic material from the Covid virus (viral RNA) in stool samples from children with multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome (a rare but serious condition that often strikes around four weeks after catching Covid) as well as spike protein and a marker of gut leakiness in their blood. Treating them with a drug that reduced intestinal permeabili­ty led to rapid clearance of the spike protein and an improvemen­t in their symptoms. Walt’s working hypothesis is that something similar may be happening in people with long Covid.

If other groups could replicate Walt’s findings, it would be “pretty much game over” for the idea that pockets of the virus were not still present in at least some long Covid patients, said Dr Amy Proal, a microbiolo­gist at the PolyBio Research Foundation, a US nonprofit that supports research into complex chronic inflammato­ry conditions: “I don’t personally see a mechanism by which the spike protein would be able to persist over long periods of time without the virus [being present].”

Other groups have also found evidence of the virus continuing to be present – called “viral persistenc­e” – in patients who have recovered from Covid. In April, Ami Bhatt, of Stanford University in California, and colleagues reported that about 13% of individual­s were still shedding viral RNA in their stools four months after catching Covid, and nearly 4% continued to do so at seven months. These people also often reported ongoing gastrointe­stinal symptoms such as nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain.

“The question is whether or not continued presence of the virus in the gut or elsewhere may kind of tickle the immune system, and cause there to be persistent symptoms,” Bhatt said.

Separate research, which analysed gut tissue from 46 people with inflammato­ry bowel disease who had recovered from mild Covid, found that viral RNA or proteins could still be detected in 70% of them seven months later. Roughly two-thirds of these individual­s reported continuing symptoms such as fatigue or memory issues – whereas none of those without detectable virus did.

Yet other preliminar­y research has recovered virus – in some cases replicatin­g virus – from other anatomical sites including the eyes, brain and heart many months after people became infected.

Viral persistenc­e is also seen in other illnesses, such as Ebola, where the virus hides out in “anatomical sanctuarie­s” such as the eyeball or testicles that are less accessible to the immune system – and which are thought to contribute to ongoing symptoms such as joint and muscle pain, or fatigue, in many survivors.

Even so, definitive proof that viral reservoirs contribute to long Covid is still lacking, and Bhatt would like to see further studies done before reaching this conclusion.

Some of these are already taking place. For instance, the US National Institutes of Health’s Recover study is searching for signs of coronaviru­s in stool samples and intestinal tissue from people with long Covid. “These types of studies will be critical for starting to tease apart what the relationsh­ip between long-term viral reservoirs and long Covid might be,” Bhatt said.

If viral persistenc­e really is driving at least a subset of people’s symptoms, it could also spur the investigat­ion into antiviral drugs as a treatment for long Covid. Although this may sound like a no-brainer, some virologist­s are concerned about the implicatio­ns of doing so.

“The idea of giving people longterm antiviral monotherap­y to try and clear the virus is a pretty contentiou­s issue because, given how much adaptation of the virus we see even in short periods of time, the possibilit­y of the virus escaping is extremely high,” said Dr Deepti Gurdasani, a clinical epidemiolo­gist at Queen Mary University, London. “I think we really need to start thinking about dual or triple therapies, and trialling them, because we can’t really afford to create more escape mutants at this point in time.”

Whether it’s scrutiny of tissue samples, or trials of antivirals, for those who have been living with long Covid, some for upwards of two years, such studies can’t come fast enough.

 ?? Photograph: David Davies/PA ?? Oxford University’s Explain project is looking into breathless­ness in patients with long Covid. Covid proteins have been detected up to a year after infection.
Photograph: David Davies/PA Oxford University’s Explain project is looking into breathless­ness in patients with long Covid. Covid proteins have been detected up to a year after infection.

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