COVID-19 antibodies last at least three months; so do symptoms for many
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[October 13, 2020]
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) - The following is a roundup of
some of the latest scientific studies on the novel coronavirus and
efforts to find treatments and vaccines for COVID-19, the illness caused
by the virus.
COVID-19 antibodies last at least three months
People infected with COVID-19 develop antibodies targeting the new
coronavirus that last for at least three months, according to two
reports published on Thursday in Science Immunology. The two studies,
together involving nearly 750 patients, both point to immunoglobulin G (IgG)
antibodies, which start showing up well after an infection begins, as
the longest-lasting. Researchers found IgG antibodies with two targets -
a spike protein on the virus that helps it infect cells, and a part of
the spike called the receptor binding domain (RBD) - lasted more than
100 days. While the protective effect of COVID-19 antibodies is not
completely clear, Jen Gommerman of the University of Toronto, coauthor
of the study, said her team also found levels of so-called neutralizing
antibodies, which inactivate the virus, "appeared to be very stable."
The other study, from Harvard Medical School, reported similar findings.
This means that a properly designed vaccine "should elicit a durable
antibody response that has the potential to neutralize the virus,"
Gommerman said. Her group also found that antibodies in saliva
correlated with antibodies in blood, but at this point the saliva tests
are not sensitive enough to replace blood tests.
COVID-19 symptoms linger for months for many
Three months after becoming ill, many COVID-19 patients still have
symptoms, two studies confirm, and the more severe the initial
infections, the higher the odds of persistent problems. In Spain,
doctors checked back with 108 patients, including 44 who had been
severely ill. At 12 weeks after diagnosis, 76% still reported
after-effects, with 40% reporting three or more coronavirus-related
health issues, doctors said in a paper posted on Thursday on medRxiv
ahead of peer review. The most common complaints were shortness of
breath, physical weakness, cough, chest pain, palpitations, and
psychological and cognitive disorders. In a similar study of 233 U.S.
COVID-19 patients - eight of whom had been severely ill - one in four
still had symptoms 90 days after first feeling ill. Rates were higher
for patients who had been sicker: 59.4% at 30 days and 40.6% at 90 days.
"But even for very mild and initially asymptomatic cases, 14.3% have
complications persist for 30 days or longer," the authors reported on
Sunday on medRxiv. In the U.S. study, the most common persistent
symptoms were impaired smell and taste, difficulty concentrating,
shortness of breath, memory loss, confusion, headache, heart
palpitations, chest pain, pain with deep breaths, dizziness, and rapid
heartbeat.
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Convalescent plasma samples in vials are seen before being tested
for COVID-19 antibodies at the Bloodworks Northwest Laboratory
during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Renton,
Washington, U.S. September 9, 2020. REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson
Remdesivir cut COVID-19 recovery time by 5 days
Final data from a large study of Gilead Sciences Inc's antiviral
drug remdesivir showed the treatment cut COVID-19 recovery time by
five days among hospitalized patients, one day faster than
preliminary data had indicated, researchers reported on Thursday in
The New England Journal of Medicine. The 1,062-patient study
compared up to up to 10 days of therapy with remdesivir - now sold
in some markets as Veklury - to a placebo. The average recovery time
was 10 days among those who got the Gilead drug versus 15 days in
the placebo group. Among patients requiring oxygen at the start,
those taking remdesivir continued to need oxygen for an average of
13 days, compared to 21 days for patients who got a placebo. In a
separate analysis looking just at patients who received oxygen, the
drug appeared to reduce the risk of death over the next month by
70%. "We now have data suggesting that giving remdesivir to patients
on oxygen may significantly reduce their chances of death compared
to other subgroups," Dr. Andre Kalil, an infectious disease expert
at the University of Nebraska Medical Center and the study's lead
investigator, said in a news release.
Coronavirus rarely travels from mother to newborn
Transmission of the new coronavirus from mothers to newborns is
rare, doctors from New York-Presbyterian/Columbia University Irving
Medical Center reported on Monday in JAMA Pediatrics. They studied
101 babies born to 100 mothers with COVID-19, including 10 whose
mothers had been severely ill. Almost all of the babies tested
negative for the virus, while tests in two newborns had
indeterminate results. If these two indeterminate results are
considered positive, the overall incidence of transmission was 2.0%.
Even with a 2% transmission rate, "none of our babies exhibited
clinical symptoms of COVID-19, either during their newborn nursery
stay or during ... the first few weeks of life," coauthor Dr. Dani
Dumitriu told Reuters Health by email. Roughly 90% of the newborns
were breastfed at least partially. "As the country heads into what
looks like a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is important
to know that separation of affected mothers from their newborns may
not be warranted, and direct breastfeeding appears to be safe,"
study coauthor Dr. Melissa Stockwell said.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid, Julie Steenhuysen and Will Boggs; Editing
by Bill Berkrot)
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