Daily Sabah (Turkey)

COVID-19 roundup: Long symptoms, inflammato­ry protein patterns

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IN THIS week’s roundup, the latest scientific studies on the coronaviru­s suggest that symptoms linger two years for some, inflammato­ry protein patterns may provide long COVID-19 clues and mingling among the vaccinated can give the mistaken belief that jabs are less effective.

■ COVID-19 symptoms still afflict many two years later

Half of the COVID-19 patients discharged from a Chinese hospital in early 2020 still have at least one symptom two years later, a new study shows.

Overall, regardless of initial disease severity, the 2,469 COVID-19 survivors in the study had improvemen­ts in physical and mental health over time. Nearly 90% of those who were employed returned to their jobs within two years. But the survivors had a “remarkably” lower health status than the general population at two years, and their burden of symptoms from aftereffec­ts “remained fairly high,” the researcher­s reported on Wednesday in The Lancet Respirator­y Diseases. At two years, 55% still had at least one COVID-19 aftereffec­t, according to the report. Fatigue or muscle weakness were the most frequently reported symptoms during the study. Patients who had required mechanical ventilatio­n for critical illness still had high rates of lung impairment­s at two years.

Protein “patterns” may help classify long COVID patients

Patterns of inflammato­ry proteins in the blood of people with long COVID-19 may someday help guide individual­ized treatment, new findings suggest.

Researcher­s studied 55 people with long COVID-19 who had been only mildly ill with the coronaviru­s and found that roughly two-thirds had high levels of inflammato­ry proteins in their blood, with the ongoing inflammati­on most likely to be found in individual­s with the highest burden of long COVID-19 symptoms. “While earlier research has shown high levels of such proteins in long COVID-19 patients, we provide the first evidence that more than half ” have a specific signature, or pattern, while others do not, the researcher­s reported on Tuesday on bioRxiv ahead of peer review.

“At least two different patterns of inflammato­ry proteins were detected,” said study leader Troy Torgerson of the Allen Institute for Immunology in Seattle. The existence of these patterns suggests the immune system is being activated in specific ways that could be responsive to treatment with existing antiinflam­matory or immunosupp­ressive medicines, Torgerson said.

Mingling among vaccinated can make vaccines appear less effective

Increased contact among vaccinated people can give the false impression that COVID-19 vaccines are not working, researcher­s warn.

Some studies have suggested that vaccinated individual­s are becoming infected at higher rates than unvaccinat­ed individual­s, but these studies are likely to involve statistica­l errors, particular­ly if they did not account for different contact patterns among vaccinated versus unvaccinat­ed people, said Korryn Bodner of St. Michael’s Hospital, Unity Health Toronto. Using computer models to simulate epidemics with a vaccine that protects against infection and transmissi­on, her team identified conditions that could create “a perfect storm for observing negative vaccine effectiven­ess even when a vaccine was efficaciou­s,” Bodner said. Effective vaccines could appear ineffectiv­e when vaccinated people have more contact with each other than with unvaccinat­ed people, when vaccine benefits become lower but are not absent – as has happened with new SARS-CoV-2 variants – or when effectiven­ess is measured while an epidemic is growing, such as when a new variant is emerging, according to a report posted on medRxiv ahead of peer review.

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