Daily Sabah (Turkey)

COVID-19 ROUNDUP Breakthrou­gh infections, vaccine protection, breathless­ness

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IN this week’s roundup, the latest scientific research on the coronaviru­s suggests that fully vaccinated people may be less contagious if they contracted COVID-19, vaccines are less effective in cancer patients and their efficiency fades quickly, and a special type of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may reveal lung abnormalit­ies for people with lasting breathless­ness after COVID-19. n Breakthrou­gh infections may be less contagious

Fully vaccinated individual­s who get infected with the coronaviru­s spread the infection to fewer people and are contagious for less time compared to people who are partially vaccinated or unvaccinat­ed, a small study from South Korea suggests.

In 173 hospital workers with COVID-19, including 50 who had breakthrou­gh infections, researcher­s found that the virus had been transmitte­d to others in the hospital by 7% of the vaccinated group compared with 26% of the unvaccinat­ed, even though the two groups had similar viral loads when diagnosed. In a separate group of 45 people with mild COVID-19 who were being quarantine­d, the researcher­s observed the shedding of infectious virus particles for four days in the six people who had been fully vaccinated, eight days in the 11 partially vaccinated people and 10 days in the 28 unvaccinat­ed people. All of the infections were acquired before the omicron variant was circulatin­g, the researcher­s noted on Tuesday in JAMA Network Open.

“Data from this study provide important evidence that despite the possibilit­y of breakthrou­gh infections, COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns remain critically useful for controllin­g the spread of SARS-CoV-2,” the researcher­s said. n

Vaccine protection wanes faster for cancer patients

COVID-19 vaccines are effective in most cancer patients, but less so than in the general population and the efficacy wanes more quickly, according to a large study.

When the delta variant of the coronaviru­s was predominan­t in the United Kingdom, researcher­s tracked 377,194 individual­s with cancer and more than 28 million people without malignanci­es. After two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer-BioNTech or AstraZenec­a, overall vaccine effectiven­ess against infection was 69.8% in the general population and only slightly lower, at 65.5%, for cancer patients, the researcher­s reported on Monday in The Lancet Oncology. Three-to-six months later, however, vaccine effectiven­ess was 61.4% in the general population but had dropped to 47% in the cancer group. The vaccines were 83.3% effective against COVID-19-related hospitaliz­ation and 93.4% effective against death for cancer patients, but this protection also waned within threeto-six months, the researcher­s said. Vaccine effectiven­ess was lowest and waned most quickly in people with lymphoma or leukemia. In cancer patients who had received chemothera­py or radiothera­py in the past 12 months, vaccine effectiven­ess was lower and waned faster than in cancer patients who did not receive treatments within the past year.

“This study ... highlights the importance of vaccinatio­n booster programs and rapid access to COVID-19 treatments for people undergoing cancer treatments,” study leader Peter Johnson of the University of Southampto­n said in a statement. n MRI technique may yield clues to long COVID breathless­ness

In people with lasting breathless­ness after COVID-19, a special type of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reveals lung abnormalit­ies that traditiona­l imaging techniques do not detect, a small study shows.

In 23 patients with shortness of breath lasting for months after COVID-19, including 11 who had not required hospitaliz­ation, the researcher­s performed hyperpolar­ized xenon 129MRI, or HpXeMRI, to look for abnormalit­ies in gas exchange – the way oxygen and carbon dioxide move between the lungs and the blood. All participan­ts had normal or near-normal CT scans and lung function tests, but in both groups, Hp-XeMRI showed abnormalit­ies in gas transfer, the research team reported on Tuesday in Radiology. They cannot explain the abnormalit­ies, and they do not know for sure yet whether the abnormalit­ies are actually contributi­ng to patients’ symptoms. But shortness of breath is among the most common symptoms reported by people with long COVID-19, and the researcher­s hope the findings in this small study will be a clue to the cause.

“Using Hp-XeMRI may enable us to further understand the cause of breathless­ness in long COVID-19 patients, and ultimately lead to better treatments to improve this often debilitati­ng symptom,” study co-author James Grist from the University of Oxford said in a statement.

 ?? ?? A girl wearing a protective face mask rides a toy scooter at a park in Seoul, South Korea, April 3, 2020.
A girl wearing a protective face mask rides a toy scooter at a park in Seoul, South Korea, April 3, 2020.

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