National Post

‘Natural immunity’ real, but vaccines best bet, study says

- SHARON KIRKEY

New research shows that a COVID-19 infection can grant the unvaccinat­ed strong and durable protection from reinfectio­n, or mild or severe COVID — protection that even stacks up to that reported for MRNA vaccines.

The major caveat: The study ended before Omicron took off, “and we can’t necessaril­y extrapolat­e our findings to the situation today,” said co-author Dr. Jessica Ridgway, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of Chicago.

But her team’s study, along with others like it, is offering insights into an enduring debate over the risk of SARS-COV-2 reinfectio­n among the unvaccinat­ed, a debate as politicize­d as COVID itself.

Among those opposed to vaccinatio­n, a popular trope is that it’s more “natural” to gain immunity from infection, which is one reason why Ridgway is careful that her work is not misinterpr­eted to imply that people shouldn’t get vaccinated.

Some have argued immunity is immunity — that immunity from natural infection contribute­s to population-wide immunity the same way vaccine-induced immunity does. Others say it’s impossible to predict, especially with emerging variants, who will actually be protected or not. How much immunity do they have, how can you measure it and is it enough? “Vaccinatio­n, although imperfect, provides a much more standard level of protection,” said Mcmaster University immunologi­st Dawn Bowdish. People also don’t risk death getting it.

For their study, Ridgway and colleagues looked at data from more than 100,000 people tested for SARS-COV-2 in six western U.S. states between 2020 and November 2021. Only the unvaccinat­ed were included. The researcher­s found a past infection was 85 per cent protective against reinfectio­n, and 88 per cent protective against hospitaliz­ation. The researcher­s didn’t see any waning in the level of protection up to nine months out from the initial infection.

“Obviously if you have to choose between getting a vaccine versus getting COVID, I would highly recommend going the vaccinatio­n route,” Ridgway stressed.

“But I do think it’s an interestin­g finding.”

She was surprised to see similar protection from severe COVID, as well as mild, and by the degree of protection. “I expected to see some level of protection, but personally I was surprised that it was as high as it was.”

It fits with what others have reported. A large study out of Qatar conducted between February 2020 and March 2022 found natural infection was associated with stronger, and more durable protection against infection, regardless of the variant, than two doses each of Pfizer and Moderna. Vaccine protection against infection waned with time after dose two, but natural immunity “demonstrat­ed hardly any waning in protection for eight months of followup after the primary infection,” the researcher­s wrote.

The Omicron wave led to a massive increase in reinfectio­ns in both groups, yet even then, natural infection was associated with stronger protection against reinfectio­n.

Nonetheles­s, “vaccinatio­n remains the safest and optimal tool” against infection and death, the authors wrote, and other academics agree that the notion that natural infection is somehow “superior” to vaccine-induced immunity is a “grave mistake and a form of the naturalist­ic fallacy,” researcher­s write in the Journal of Medical Ethics. “It is ‘natural’ to become immune through contractin­g infections, but it is also natural to die from serious infections.”

While arguing that people with natural immunity shouldn’t have to be vaccinated to qualify for vaccine passport schemes, “it would be prudential­ly irrational to choose to be infected rather than to have the vaccine, for those who are vulnerable to COVID-19,” the authors wrote. COVID can damage the heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, and lead to long-term consequenc­es like long COVID. One study found one in four who get COVID suffer impaired cognitive functionin­g. COVID is being linked with accelerate­d aging. The Qatar study also compared natural immunity to two doses of vaccines only. The difference­s with a booster thrown in may be smaller.

Omicron also likely muddies the water, because of its ability to shake off immunity from past infections. “When you have an Omicron infection you don’t generate really strong immune responses that protect you from subsequent Omicron in the absence of vaccinatio­n,” Mcmaster’s Bowdish said.

“Omicron needs at least three doses of vaccine, because you have to have sky high levels of antibodies to deal with it. It would be lovely if your third shot gave you zero chance of picking up the infection. But what your third shot does is provide you with a better infection — shorter, less severe, less likely to develop long-term health consequenc­es.”

Most variants now are subvariant­s of Omicron, and it’s likely that everything coming in the near future is going to be Omicron-like as well, said University of Ottawa molecular virologist Dr. Marc-andré Langlois.

“The good news is that vaccines still protect very well against severe disease,” he said. Other news is not so great: The subvariant­s are super transmissi­ble and require high levels of neutralizi­ng antibodies to prevent reinfectio­ns, meaning “we will see large numbers of double and triple vaccinated people getting infected,” Langlois said. Hence the urgency to develop next-generation vaccines, including vaccines that target the dominant circulatin­g strain, and nasal vaccines that can trigger high levels of neutraliza­tion where the virus enters the body — the upper respirator­y tract — to block infection.

The other caveat to the most recent study? “It’s got, inevitably, what we call a survivor bias,” Bowdish said. “Meaning, anyone who died of their first infection is not in the study. It doesn’t account for all the people who didn’t live to be in this study because of their first infection.” Still, it’s important, well-designed and confirms recently published work, said Dr. Jorg Fritz, an immunology professor at Mcgill University. But Fritz doesn’t see any argument here “that would favour letting the virus run free, aim for ‘natural immunity’ through infection of unvaccinat­ed people,” and the authors themselves certainly aren’t arguing for it.

“SARS-COV-2 in unvaccinat­ed people can cause severe pathologie­s and death, especially in the aging and immunocomp­romised population, often with long term consequenc­es,” Fritz said. “The only way to lower the negative effects is vaccinatio­n and not natural immunity.”

VACCINES STILL PROTECT VERY WELL AGAINST SEVERE DISEASE.

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