Virus can be transmitted via lung transplant; COVID-19 deadlier than flu
for ICU patients
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[February 27, 2021]
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 can be transmitted via lung transplant
The coronavirus can linger in the lungs even when swab tests of the back
of the nose and throat are negative, doctors reported after unknowingly
transplanting infected lungs into a patient who later died of COVID-19.
University of Michigan surgeons obtained the lungs from a deceased donor
who had tested negative for the virus and had reportedly never been
exposed to it. Soon afterward, the transplant recipient and one of the
surgeons developed COVID-19. The team collected a fluid sample from the
patient's new lungs and compared it to a sample taken from the lungs
immediately after removal from the donor, as well as to swab samples
from the infected surgeon. Genetic analyses showed the patient and
surgeon had both acquired virus from the donor lungs, the doctors
reported in the American Journal of Transplantation. The surgeon had
worn only a surgical mask when preparing the lungs for transplant,
rather than full personal protective equipment, because both donor and
recipient had tested negative. Potential lung transplant donors should
all have specimens collected from deep within the lungs to be tested for
the coronavirus, the report's co-author Dr. Daniel Kaul said. The virus
is less likely to be transmitted by other donated organs, such as the
liver or the kidneys, he said.
For ICU patients, COVID-19 is deadlier than flu
Compared to patients critically ill with the flu, patients critically
ill with COVID-19 have a far higher risk of dying in the intensive care
unit (ICU), a new study found. Researchers in Mexico studied 147
patients with COVID-19 admitted to their ICU between March and October,
and 94 patients admitted the year before with influenza A-H1N1. All were
in respiratory failure. Patients with flu were generally sicker when
they arrived in the ICU but were more likely to survive. Their mortality
rate was 22% versus 39% for the COVID-19 patients. After accounting for
baseline health status and other risk factors, the COVID-19 patients had
a nearly four times higher risk of death, the researchers reported on
Thursday in a paper posted on medRxiv ahead of peer review. Compared to
influenza, COVID-19 causes more severe lung damage, the researchers
said, with "fewer possibilities of recovery."
New variant on the rise in New York City
A new coronavirus variant that shares some similarities with worrisome
variants discovered abroad is on the rise in New York City, studies
show. At Columbia University, researchers were analyzing virus samples
from patients at their affiliated medical center to monitor for virus
variants first identified in the UK, South Africa and Brazil. When they
looked for a particularly concerning mutation called E484K - against
which current antibody therapies and vaccines are less effective - they
found it in some samples. In many cases, it was not in one of the
variants from abroad but a variant not seen elsewhere. By mid-February,
the new variant represented about 12% of their cases, the Columbia
researchers reported on Wednesday. The variant was also described in a
separate study by California Institute of Technology scientists, who
analyzed virus samples collected in New York State since November. They
found the new variant accounted for just 5% of samples in late January
but almost 28% by late February. Both reports were posted on medRxiv
ahead of peer review. On Thursday, New York City Health Commissioner
Dave Chokshi said the variant's real-world effect is unknown and there
is so far no indication that it reduces vaccine effectiveness.
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The word "COVID-19" is reflected in a drop on a syringe needle in
this illustration taken November 9, 2020. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File
Photo
Gyms are high-risk venues for coronavirus transmission
Gyms are high-risk venues for COVID-19 transmission and people need to
be wearing masks while there, researchers warned in two papers published
on Wednesday in the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. One study described an August
outbreak in a Chicago gym where 55 COVID-19 cases were identified among
81 attendees of indoor high-intensity exercise classes. "Twenty-two
(40%) persons with COVID-19 attended on or after the day symptoms began.
Most attendees (76%) wore masks infrequently, including persons with
(84%) and without COVID-19 (60%)," the authors reported. The other study
reported on three gyms in Hawaii where 21 COVID-19 cases in July were
linked to two instructors who taught classes while infected. The rate of
infection among students exposed before the instructors showed symptoms
was 95%, the authors said. Gym attendees should wear masks, including
during high-intensity activities, even when they are 6 feet (1.83 m) or
more apart, the Chicago researchers said. Facilities should enforce
physical distancing, improve ventilation, and encourage attendees to
isolate after symptom onset, possible exposure to COVID-19, or a
positive coronavirus test result. "Exercising outdoors or virtually
could further reduce SARS-CoV-2 transmission risk," they said.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid and Linda Carroll; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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