COVID-19
infection gives some immunity, but virus can still be spread, study
finds
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[January 14, 2021]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - People who have had
COVID-19 are highly likely to have immunity to it for at least five
months, but there is evidence that those with antibodies may still be
able to carry and spread the virus, a study of British healthcare
workers has found.
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Preliminary findings by scientists at Public Health England (PHE)
showed that reinfections in people who have COVID-19 antibodies from
a past infection are rare - with only 44 cases found among 6,614
previously infected people in the study.
But experts cautioned that the findings mean people who contracted
the disease in the first wave of the pandemic in the early months of
2020 may now be vulnerable to catching it again.
They also warned that people with so-called natural immunity -
acquired through having had the infection - may still be able carry
the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus in their nose and throat and could
unwittingly pass it on.
“We now know that most of those who have had the virus, and
developed antibodies, are protected from reinfection, but this is
not total and we do not yet know how long protection lasts," said
Susan Hopkins, senior medical adviser at PHE and co-leader of the
study, whose findings were published on Thursday.
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“This means even if you believe you already had the disease and are
protected, you can be reassured it is highly unlikely you will
develop severe infections. But there is still a risk you could
acquire an infection and transmit (it) to others."
MAJOR IMPLICATIONS
Experts not directly involved in the research, which is known as the
SIREN study, urged people to note its key findings.
"These data reinforce the message that, for the time being, everyone
is a potential source of infection for others and should behave
accordingly," said Eleanor Riley, a professor of immunology and
infectious disease at Edinburgh University.
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 Simon Clarke, an associate
professor in cellular microbiology at Reading
University, said the study "has major
implications for how we can get out of the
current crisis".
"This means that the vast majority of the
population will either need to have natural
immunity or have been immunised for us to fully
lift restrictions on our lives, unless we are
prepared to see many more people being infected
and dying from COVID-19," he said.
PHE said in a statement that the study had not been able to explore
antibody or other immune responses to the COVID-19 vaccines being
rolled out in Britain. Vaccine effects would be studied as part of
SIREN later this year, it said.
The SIREN study involves tens of thousands of healthcare workers in
Britain who have been tested regularly since June for new COVID-19
infections as well as for the presence of antibodies.
Between June 18 and Nov. 24, scientists found 44 potential
reinfections - two "probable" and 42 "possible" - among 6,614
participants who had tested positive for antibodies. This represents
an 83% rate of protection from reinfection, they said.
The researchers said they would continue to follow the participants
to see if this natural immunity might last longer than five months
in some. But they said early evidence from the next stage of the
study suggested some people with immunity could still carry high
levels of virus.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Mark Heinrich, Robert Birsel)
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