Scientists presenting the findings, from 100 non-hospitalised
COVID-19 patients in Britain, said they were "reassuring" but did
not mean people cannot in rare cases be infected twice with the
disease.
"While our findings cause us to be cautiously optimistic about the
strength and length of immunity generated after SARS-CoV-2
infection, this is just one piece of the puzzle," said Paul Moss, a
professor of haematology at Britain's Birmingham University who
co-led the study.
"There is still a lot for us learn before we have a full
understanding of how immunity to COVID-19 works."
Experts not directly involved with the study said its findings were
important and would add to a growing body of knowledge about
potential protective immunity to COVID-19.
The study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed by other experts but
was published online on bioRxiv, analysed the blood of 100 patients
six months after they had had either mild or asymptomatic COVID-19.
It found that while some of the patients' antibody levels had
dropped, their T-cell response - another key part of the immune
system - remained robust.
"(Our) early results show that T-cell responses may outlast the
initial antibody response," said Shamez Ladhani, a consultant
epidemiologist at Public Health England who co-led the work.
The study also found the size of T-cell response differed, and was
considerably higher in people who had had symptomatic COVID-19 than
those who had no symptoms when infected.
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The researchers said this could be interpreted in two ways: It is possible that
higher cellular immunity might give better protection against re-infection in
people who had symptoms, or equally, that asymptomatic patients are better able
to fight off the virus without the need to generate a large immune response.
"These results provide reassurance that, although the titre of antibody to
SARS-CoV-2 can fall below detectable levels within a few months of infection, a
degree of immunity to the virus may be maintained," said Charles Bangham, chair
of immunology at Imperial College London.
"This ... bodes well for the long term, in terms of both vaccine development and
the possibility of long-term protection against re-infection," said Eleanor
Riley, an immunology and infectious disease professor at Edinburgh University.
She stressed, however, that "we don't yet know whether the people in this study
are protected from re-infection."
While more than 46 million people worldwide have been infected with COVID-19,
confirmed cases of re-infection are so far very rare.
(This story fixes typo in name in para 7)
(Reporting by Kate Kelland, editing by Steve Orlofsky and Nick Macfie)
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