Dayton Daily News

SCIENTISTS DOCUMENT FIRST CASE OF VIRUS REINFECTIO­N

- Apoorva Mandavilli ©2020 The New York Times

A 33-year-old man was infected a second time with the coronaviru­s more than four months after his first bout, the first documented case of so-called reinfectio­n, researcher­s in Hong Kong reported Monday.

The finding was not unexpected, especially given the millions of people who have been infected worldwide, experts said. And the man had no symptoms the second time, suggesting that even though the prior expo- sure did not prevent the rein- fection, his immune system kept the virus somewhat in check.

“The second infection was completely asymptomat­ic — his immune response prevented the disease from getting worse,” said Akiko Iwasaki, an immunologi­st at Yale University who was not involved with the work but reviewed the report at The New York Times’ request. “It’s kind of a textbook exam- ple of how immunity should work.”

People who do not have symptoms may still spread the virus to others, however, underscori­ng the importance of vaccines, Iwasaki said. In the man’s case, she added, “natural infection created immunity that prevented disease but not reinfectio­n.”

“In order to provide herd immunity, a potent vaccine is needed to induce immunity t hat preve nts both reinfectio­n and disease,” Iwasaki said.

Doctors have reported several cases of presumed reinfectio­n in the United States and elsewhere, but none of those cases have been confirmed with rigorous test- ing. Recovered people are known to carry viral frag- ments for weeks, which can lead to positive test results in the absence of live virus.

But t he Hong Kong researcher­s sequenced the virus from both of the man’s infections and found significan­t difference­s, suggesting that the patient had been infected a second time.

“I believe this is the first reported case that is confirmed by genome sequenc- ing,” said Dr. Kelvin Kai-Wang To, a clinical microbiolo­gist at the University of Hong Kong.

The study is to be published in the journal Clini- cal Infectious Diseases. The Times obtained the manu- script from the university.

The man’s first case was diagnosed March 26, and he had only mild symptoms. In accordance with regulation­s in Hong Kong, he was hospitaliz­ed March 29 even though his symptoms had subsided and released April 14 only after he had tested negative for the virus twice.

He had no detectable antibodies after that first bout with the virus. He was positive again for the coronavi- rus on a saliva test Aug. 15 after a trip to Spain via the United Kingdom; the test was administer­ed at the airport. The man had picked up a strain that was circulatin­g in Europe in July and August, the researcher­s said.

His infections were clearly caused by different versions of the coronaviru­s, To said. “Our results prove that his second infection is caused by a new virus that he acquired recently, rather than prolonged viral shedding.”

Common cold coronavi- ruses are known to cause reinfectio­ns in less than a year, but experts had hoped that the new coronaviru­s might behave more like its cousins, severe acute respirator­y syndrome and Mid- dle East respirator­y syndrome, which seemed to produce protection lasting a few years.

It is still unclear how com- mon reinfectio­n from the new coronaviru­s might be because few researcher­s have sequenced the virus from each infection.

“We’ve had, what, 23 million cases documented thus far, but the fact that one out of them at this point has been reinfected should not cause undue alarm as of yet,” said Jeffrey Shaman, an epidemiolo­gist at Columbia University in New York.

“However, it remains very, very concerning — and this does nothing to dispel that — that we may be subject to repeat infection with this virus,” he said.

Iwasaki was more sanguine. She noted that the man had no antibodies after the first infection but produced them after the second exposure. Immunity is expected to build with each exposure to a pathogen exactly in this way, she noted.

“The majority of patients likely have a cocktail of immune responses that activate on second exposure,” said Brian Wasik, a virologist at Cornell University. “This Hong Kong patient also seems to have been asymptomat­ic on second infection, perhaps due to some immune response.”

But the researcher­s said it’s also possible that in some people, a second exposure will prove more severe. “It cannot be generalize­d yet, because there’s still a possibilit­y that the second infection can be worse,” To said.

 ?? NIAID / NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH ?? Novel Coronaviru­s SARS-CoV-2 virus particles. University of Hong Kong scientists claim to have the first evidence of someone being reinfected with the virus that causes COVID-19. They said Monday genetic tests show a 33-yearold man returning to Hong Kong from a trip in mid-August had a different strain of the virus than one he’d been infected with in March.
NIAID / NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH Novel Coronaviru­s SARS-CoV-2 virus particles. University of Hong Kong scientists claim to have the first evidence of someone being reinfected with the virus that causes COVID-19. They said Monday genetic tests show a 33-yearold man returning to Hong Kong from a trip in mid-August had a different strain of the virus than one he’d been infected with in March.

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