Lodi News-Sentinel

Some are getting COVID-19 again even after taking Paxlovid

- Rong-Gong Lin II and Luke Money

Some coronaviru­s-positive patients who have completed treatment of the anti-COVID drug Paxlovid are rebounding into illness, and experts are urging people to be cautious if they develop COVID-like symptoms again and become infectious.

It’s unclear how often “post-Paxlovid rebound” occurs, but University of California, San Francisco Department of Medicine chair Dr. Robert Wachter said he knows of at least one person who completed Paxlovid treatment and then became infectious again, spreading the virus to other family members.

“It can happen,” Wachter tweeted. “If you develop recurrent symptoms and have a (positive) rapid test, you are infectious. Please act accordingl­y.”

Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said post-Paxlovid COVID-19 relapses are “real.”

“They’ve happened in a significan­t enough number that they’ve been noticed by lots of folks in lots of different places,” she said.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) authorized the use of Merck’s molnupirav­ir pill for treating COVID-19. The molnupirav­ir pill is cleared for use by adults 18 and older who have tested positive for COVID-19 and are at high risk of being hospitaliz­ed or dying.

In a statement on its website, the U.S Food and Drug Administra­tion said it is aware of reports of COVID19 symptoms returning following the completion of Paxlovid treatment. “In some of these cases, patients tested negative on a direct SARS-CoV-2 viral test and then tested positive again,” the FDA said.

The agency said that in the Paxlovid clinical trial, there have been some patients — about 1% to 2% — who tested negative and then became positive. The finding wasn’t only in people who took Paxlovid; it also occurred in those who took the placebo.

“Yet, judging by all the anecdotes, rebound sure seems more common than that — we’re waiting for good data,” Wachter tweeted. Wachter suggested that a person who has completed a course of Paxlovid and then tests positive again should be considered infectious.

Paxlovid’s clinical trial data were collected when the Delta variant of the coronaviru­s dominated nationwide, before the rise of the far-more-transmissi­ble Omicron family that’s circulatin­g now.

“The question is, ‘Is this more common with omicron?’ We’re actually doing a lot of work right now to try to sort that out. We’re talking to health systems, getting real world experience data,” said Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House COVID- `19 response coordinato­r.

But even if the rebound rate has remained unchanged, the number of people affected could seem far larger now based on wider use of the drug.

“If you have 20,000 people getting Paxlovid every day ... even if it was only still 2%, that would mean 400 people are having rebound every day. So it is hard to know exactly how often it happens,” Jha said during a briefing Wednesday.

However, he also noted that “the people who have that rebound are not getting particular­ly sick, are not ending up in the hospital.”

“If the goal of this treatment, which it was, was to prevent hospitaliz­ations and deaths, it is doing that incredibly well,” he said.

Those who wish to be especially careful about the risk of infecting others may should consider wearing a mask in all indoor settings, even around family members of the same household, for a few more days or perhaps a week once the Paxlovid treatment is complete, Wachter said.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES ?? A COVID-19 testing and vaccinatio­n site is open on a Brooklyn, N.Y. street on April 18.
SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES A COVID-19 testing and vaccinatio­n site is open on a Brooklyn, N.Y. street on April 18.
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