South African virus variant may resist antibody drugs; Pfizer/BioNTech
vaccine seems to work vs UK variant
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[January 26, 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.
South African variant may resist current antibody treatments
The variant of the new coronavirus identified in South Africa can
resist, or "escape," antibodies that neutralize earlier versions of the
virus, scientists have found. It "exhibits complete escape" from three
classes of monoclonal antibodies manufactured for treating COVID-19
patients, and it shows "substantial or complete" resistance to
neutralizing antibodies in blood donated by COVID-19 survivors, the
scientists reported on Tuesday on bioRxiv ahead of peer review.
Similarities between the South Africa variant and another variant
identified in Brazil suggest the Brazilian variant will show similar
resistance, they added. Liam Smeeth of the London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine, who was not involved in the study, noted that these
were laboratory tests, and it would be unwise to extrapolate the
findings to humans at this point. "The data do raise the possibility
that the protection gained from past infection with COVID-19 may be
lower for re-infection with the South African variant," he said. "The
data also suggest that the existing vaccines could be less effective
against the South African variant." He called for large studies among
populations where the variant is common.
Pfizer/BioNTech shot likely protects against UK variant
The COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer Inc and BioNTech SE is likely to
protect against the more infectious variant of the virus discovered in
Britain and now spreading around the world, according to laboratory
tests. Researchers took blood samples from 16 people who had received
the vaccine and exposed the blood to a synthetic virus, or pseudovirus,
that was engineered to have 10 mutations found in the UK variant. The
antibodies that had developed in response to the vaccine effectively
neutralized the pseudovirus, according to a report posted on Tuesday on
bioRxiv ahead of peer review. "This makes it very unlikely that the UK
variant will escape from the protection provided by the vaccine," said
Jonathan Stoye, a virus scientist at Britain's Francis Crick Institute
who was not involved in the research. Similar experiments are needed
with the more concerning variant first found in South Africa, he
suggested. AstraZeneca Plc, Moderna Inc and CureVac NV are also testing
whether their respective vaccines will protect against the
fast-spreading variants.
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A vial and sryinge are seen in front of a displayed Pfizer and
Biontech logo in this illustration taken January 11, 2021.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic
Immune system will remember how to make COVID-19 antibodies
People who have recovered from COVID-19 can likely mount a fast and
effective response to the virus if they encounter it again because
their immune system's "B cells" will remember how to make the
antibodies needed to fight it, a new study shows. Researchers
tracked 87 COVID-19 survivors for six months and found that while
levels of antibodies to the virus may decline over time, the number
of memory B cells remains unchanged. The antibodies produced by
these cells are more potent than the patients' original antibodies
and may be more resistant to mutations in the spike protein the
virus uses to break into cells, they said. For example, they found,
the antibodies could recognize and neutralize at least one of the
mutations in the South African variant of the virus that has caused
concern among health experts. Even if antibody levels fall, B cells
will remember how to make them when necessary, according to study
leader Michel Nussenzweig of Rockefeller University, whose findings
were reported on Monday in Nature. If this is true at six months, as
in this study, it is safe to assume it is probably still true for
longer periods, he added. People who have recovered from COVID-19
"may become infected but the immune system will be prepped to fight
off the infection," Nussenzweig said.
Mortality higher when ICUs are packed with COVID-19 patients
The more full an intensive care unit (ICU) is with COVID-19
patients, the higher the mortality rate among those patients, new
data suggest. When researchers tracked outcomes of 8,515 COVID-19
patients admitted to 88 U.S. Veterans Affairs hospitals in 2020,
they found that survival rates improved between March and August.
Throughout the study period, however, the risk of death was nearly
double when at least 75% of ICU beds were filled with COVID-19
patients, compared to when they accounted for no more than 25% of
ICU beds. COVID-19 mortality "increases during periods of peak
demand," said Dr. Dawn Bravata of the Richard L Roudebush VA Medical
Center in Indianapolis who co-led the study published on Tuesday in
JAMA Network Open. "The more the public can do to avoid infections,
the better," she added. In addition, Bravata said, "facilities
within a healthcare system or within a geographic region should
collaborate to triage critically ill patients with COVID-19 to sites
with greater ICU capacity to reduce strain on any one facility."
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid, Linda Carroll, Kate Kelland and Ludwig
Burger; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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