Dayton Daily News

Got booster? You likely won’t need another for long time

- Apoorva Mandavilli

As people across the world grapple with the prospect of living with the coronaviru­s for the foreseeabl­e future, one question looms large: How soon before they need yet another shot?

Not for many months, and perhaps not for years, according to a flurry of new studies.

Three doses of a COVID vaccine — or even just two — are enough to protect most people from serious illness and death for a long time, the studies suggest.

“We’re starting to see now diminishin­g returns on the number of additional doses,” said John Wherry, director of the Institute for Immunology at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. Although people who are over 65 or at high risk of illness may benefit from a fourth vaccine dose, it may be unnecessar­y for most people, he added.

Federal health officials including Dr. Anthony Fauci, the Biden administra­tion’s top COVID adviser, have also said that they are unlikely to recommend a fourth dose before the fall.

The omicron variant can dodge antibodies — immune molecules that prevent the virus from infecting cells — produced after two doses of a COVID vaccine. But a third shot of the mRNA vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech or by Moderna prompts the body to make a much wider variety of antibodies, which would be difficult for any variant of the virus to evade, according to the most recent study.

The diverse repertoire of antibodies produced should be able to protect people from new variants, even those that differ significan­tly from the original version of the virus, the study suggests.

“If people are exposed to another variant like omicron, they now got some extra ammunition to fight it,” said Dr. Julie McElrath, an infectious disease physician and immunologi­st at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.

What’s more, other parts of the immune system can remember and destroy the virus over many months if not years, according to at least four studies published in top-tier journals over the past month.

Specialize­d immune cells called T cells produced after immunizati­on by four brands of COVID vaccine — Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and Novavax — are about 80% as powerful against omicron as other variants, the research found. Given how different omicron’s mutations are from previous variants, it is very likely that T cells would mount a similarly robust attack on any future variant as well, researcher­s said.

This matches what scientists have found for the SARS coronaviru­s, which killed nearly 800 people in a 2003 epidemic in Asia. In people exposed to that virus, T cells have lasted more than 17 years. Evidence so far indicates that the immune cells for the new coronaviru­s — sometimes called memory cells — may also decline very slowly, experts said.

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