The 25-year old from Reno, Nevada, tested positive in April after
showing mild symptoms, then got sick again in late May with a more
serious bout, according to a case report in the Lancet Infectious
Diseases medical journal.
The report was published just hours after U.S. President Donald
Trump, who was infected with COVID-19 and hospitalised earlier this
month, said he believes he now has immunity and felt "so powerful".
Scientists said that while known incidences of reinfection appear
rare - and the Nevada man has now recovered - cases like his were
worrying. Other isolated cases of reinfection have been reported
around the world, including in Asia and Europe.
"It is becoming increasingly clear that reinfections are possible,
but we can't yet know how common this will be," said Simon Clarke, a
microbiology expert at Britain's Reading University.
"If people can be reinfected easily, it could also have implications
for vaccination programmes as well as our understanding of when and
how the pandemic will end."
'STILL DON'T KNOW ENOUGH'
The Nevada patient's doctors, who first reported the case in a non
peer-reviewed paper in August, said sophisticated testing showed
that the virus strains associated with each bout of infection were
genetically different.
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"These findings reinforce the point that we still do not know enough about the
immune response to this infection," said Paul Hunter, a professor in medicine at
Britain's University of East Anglia.
Brendan Wren, a professor of vaccinology at the London School of Hygiene &
Tropical Medicine, said the Nevada case was the fifth confirmed example of
reinfection worldwide.
"The demonstration that it is possible to be reinfected by SARS-CoV-2 may
suggest that a COVID-19 vaccine may not be totally protective," he said.
"However, given the (more than) 40 million cases worldwide, these small examples
of reinfection are tiny and should not deter efforts to develop vaccines."
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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