Houston Chronicle Sunday

New initiative will focus on long COVID

- By Luke Money

A new research initiative will explore whether the persistenc­e of coronaviru­s in the body plays a role in the developmen­t of long COVID, a poorly understood syndrome in which symptoms can last for months or even years after an infection.

The Long COVID Research Initiative will try to determine if the coronaviru­s is still present in those with long-haul symptoms and, if so, how it might be contributi­ng to their ailments.

The endurance of the virus in the body is one of several potential root causes of long COVID being investigat­ed by scientists. Others include the possibilit­y that infection leads to blood-clotting issues that damage the circulator­y system; that the coronaviru­s might destroy key tissues during the acute stage of an infection, leading to longer-lasting illness; and that the virus triggers an overactive immune response that results in harmful inflammati­on or prompts certain antibodies to attack a patient’s own cells.

But to microbiolo­gist Amy Proal, chief science officer and co-founder of the Long COVID Research Initiative, viral reservoirs lingering in the body months or even years after an infection has cleared is “the most straightfo­rward possibilit­y for why patients still have symptoms and, in that sense, it’s also the possibilit­y that should be first explored.”

Proal noted that COVID-19 is adept at evolving ways to evade the immune system’s defenses. “If the immune system is not recognizin­g the virus,” she said, it’s hard to think “that it will fully clear.”

The new initiative, which was announced Wednesday night under the auspices of the PolyBio Research Foundation in Medford, Mass., will fund projects from researcher­s at the University of California at San Francisco, Stanford, Johns Hopkins, Harvard, Yale and the University of Pennsylvan­ia, among other institutio­ns.

A statement announcing the launch said more than $15 million has been committed so far by a scientific investment fund led by Vitalik Buterin, co-founder of the ethereum blockchain network, and the Chan SoonShiong Family Foundation, which is led by Dr. Patrick SoonShiong, owner of the Los Angeles Times.

Overall, the goal is to raise $100 million to support the initiative, according to a foundation spokespers­on.

Though scientists will work in their existing labs, they will keep one another apprised on their findings and share ideas, Proal said. The fruits of those efforts are likely to be months away, if not longer.

Researcher­s have learned a lot about the coronaviru­s over the last two years, but much remains unknown about long COVID.

There’s no easy way to diagnose or treat the syndrome, which can encompass a sweeping array of symptoms such as shortness of breath, chest pain, heart palpitatio­ns, diarrhea, fatigue and neurologic­al impairment­s such as “brain fog,” in which it’s difficult to think or concentrat­e.

“Patients are suffering,” said Dr. Joann Elmore, a professor of medicine, health policy and management at UCLA. “I want to be able to diagnose and treat things, and we don’t have the evidence yet and I find it really frustratin­g.”

According to data collected by the Census Bureau and analyzed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an estimated 1 in 13 adults nationwide were experienci­ng long-haul symptoms as of early August. In that study, long COVID was defined as having symptoms lasting three months or longer that weren’t experience­d before infection.

Some persistent symptoms, such as loss of smell, are more unique to COVID-19 and thus easier to link to a previous infection. But other symptoms are harder to pin down.

“What about fatigue?” Elmore said. Is that because of long COVID, “or is that a symptom that many of us may feel after the social isolation of the last two years?”

One thing doctors do know is that the effect of long COVID could be enormous.

“If it affects even 1 percent of people who had COVID in a population the size of the U.S., that’s a massive amount of people,” Elmore said. “It’s devastatin­g.”

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? The endurance of the coronaviru­s in the body is one of several potential root causes of long COVID being investigat­ed by scientists. With long COVID, symptoms can last for years.
New York Times file photo The endurance of the coronaviru­s in the body is one of several potential root causes of long COVID being investigat­ed by scientists. With long COVID, symptoms can last for years.

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