India COVID-19 variant exhibits resistance; antibody drug shows promise
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[May 29, 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.
India variant shows resistance to antibody drugs, vaccines
Antibody drugs and COVID-19 vaccines are less effective against a
coronavirus variant that was first detected in India, according to
researchers. The variant, known as B.1.617.2, has mutations that make it
more transmissible. It is now predominant in some parts of India and has
spread to many other countries. A multicenter team of scientists in
France studied a B.1.617.2 variant isolated from a traveler returning
from India. Compared to the B.1.1.7 variant first identified in Britain,
the India variant was more resistant to antibody drugs, although three
currently approved drugs still remained effective against it, they
found. Antibodies in blood from unvaccinated COVID-19 survivors and from
people who received both doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine were
3-fold to 6-fold less potent against the India variant than against the
UK variant and a variant first identified in South Africa, according to
a report posted on Thursday on the website bioRxiv ahead of peer review.
The two-dose AstraZeneca vaccine, which does not protect against the
South Africa variant, is likely to be ineffective against the India
variant as well. Antibodies from people who had received their first
dose "barely inhibited" this India variant, said study co-author Olivier
Schwartz of Institut Pasteur. The study, Schwartz added, shows that the
rapid spread of the India variant is associated with its ability to
"escape" the effect of neutralizing antibodies.
New antibody drug keeps mild COVID-19 from worsening
An antibody drug from Vir Biotechnology and GlaxoSmithKline that
protects against progression of COVID-19 in high-risk patients with mild
to moderate disease received emergency use authorization by the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday. In a large randomized trial,
patient risk of progression to more severe illness was reduced by 85%
with the drug, sotrovimab, compared to a placebo, according to an
interim report from the trial posted on Friday on the medRxiv website in
advance of peer review. Everyone in the trial had risk factors for
severe COVID-19 such as heart disease, diabetes, obesity and old age.
Three of 291 patients (1%) in the sotrovimab group became sick enough to
be hospitalized, versus 21 of 292 (7%) in the placebo group, researchers
said. All five patients who needed to be admitted to intensive care
received placebo, they reported. Serious complications were less common
with sotrovimab than with placebo, they added. The antibody treatment
will be available for COVID-19 patients in the coming weeks, GSK and Vir
said on Wednesday.
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Medics tend to a man with breathing problems inside a COVID-19 ward
of a government-run hospital, amidst the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) pandemic, in Bijnor district, Uttar Pradesh, India, May
11, 2021. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui
Joint and muscle disease drugs may limit vaccine
response
The COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna may be less
effective in patients taking immunosuppressant drugs for rheumatic
and musculoskeletal diseases, researchers said. "While additional
research is required, patients on immunosuppressants should be aware
that they may not be fully protected against COVID even after full
vaccination. Therefore, patients should talk to their providers
before relaxing precautions," said Dr. Julie Paik of Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine in Baltimore. In an earlier study, her
team found that most patients with rheumatic and musculoskeletal
diseases do respond appropriately to the vaccines. Looking more
closely at 20 people whose immune systems did not respond well -
that is, no antibodies were detectable after vaccination - the
researchers found that most were receiving multiple
immunosuppressive agents. "A unifying factor" among the patients was
their use of medications such as rituximab and mycophenolate mofetil
that affect immune cells called lymphocytes that produce antibodies
and help control immune responses, the researchers reported on
Monday in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine. "Our study
highlights the need for physicians and patients to be aware that
immunosuppressants may prevent an appropriate vaccine response
against SARS-CoV-2," Paik said.
Robust, coordinated immune response marks mild COVID-19
In COVID-19 patients who do not become seriously ill, the immune
system reacts to the virus "robustly," with a highly coordinated
response, and this coordination may be one key to ensuring a mild
illness, according to researchers. Detailed studies of immune system
behavior in COVID-19 patients have focused primarily on those with
moderate or severe illness and have found "uncoordinated" immune
responses. The new study, posted Wednesday on the bioRxiv website
ahead of peer review, "used cutting-edge methods to deeply study
immune cells" in 18 patients with only mild illness, said study
co-author Greg Szeto of the Allen Institute for Immunology in
Seattle. In these mildly ill volunteers, the more intense the immune
response in early infection, the higher the levels of antibodies in
their blood after recovery, the multicenter research team found. And
compared to participants who recovered, participants who had
lingering troublesome symptoms - so-called Long Covid - had weaker
immune responses to the virus in early infection, Szeto added. The
differences the study found between mildly ill patients who did and
did not develop Long Covid may help researchers devise more
personalized ways to monitor immune responses to the virus and
better methods for treatment, Szeto's team concluded.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid and Megan Brooks; Editing by Will Dunham)
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