Vaccination after COVID improves immunity; ivermectin fails in major
trial
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[April 02, 2022]
By Nancy Lapid
(Reuters) - The following is a summary of some recent studies on
COVID-19. They include research that warrants further study to
corroborate the findings and that has yet to be certified by peer
review.
Vaccination after COVID-19 improves immunity
Although people who recover from COVID-19 usually gain some immune
defenses against reinfection, they get additional protection from
vaccines, especially against severe disease, according to two studies
published on Thursday in The Lancet Infectious Diseases.
One study of 22,566 people in Brazil who had recovered from COVID found
that all four vaccines in use there - from Sinovac Biotech, AstraZeneca,
Johnson & Johnson, and Pfizer/BioNTech - provided significant additional
protection. Effectiveness against infection starting 14 days after
vaccination completion ranged from 39.4% for Sinovac's CoronaVac to
64.8% for the Pfizer/BioNTech shots. Effectiveness against
hospitalization or death ranged from 81.3% for CoronaVac to 89.7% for
Pfizer/BioNTech's vaccine.
The second study, using data from more than 5 million people in Sweden,
found that "hybrid immunity" from a combination of previous infection
and receipt of either one or two doses of a vaccine provided additional
protection for at least nine months. "One-dose hybrid immunity was
associated with an additional 94% lower risk of COVID-19
hospitalization, and two-dose hybrid immunity with an additional 90%
lower risk of COVID-19 hospitalization," compared to natural immunity
alone, the researchers said. Neither study included patients infected or
reinfected with the Omicron variant.
Ivermectin fails, convalescent plasma succeeds
Two gold-standard trials published in The New England Journal of
Medicine on Wednesday help settle questions about two controversial
therapies touted by many early in the pandemic with decidedly mixed
results - failure for the antiparasite drug ivermectin and success for
antibody-rich blood plasma from COVID-19 survivors.
In Brazil, 3,515 patients with symptoms of COVID-19 for a week or less
and at least one risk factor for serious disease were randomly assigned
to receive ivermectin once daily for three days, another treatment, or a
placebo. Four weeks later, ivermectin failed to lead to a lower rate of
hospitalization or prolonged emergency room visits, the researchers
reported.
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The horse dewormer was popular with
conservative commentators and anti-vaccine people despite warnings
from health officials not to use it to treat COVID.
For the study of so-called convalescent plasma,
U.S. researchers enrolled more than 1,000 mostly unvaccinated adults
within eight days of the onset of COVID-19 symptoms. Half of the
participants were randomly assigned to receive a convalescent-plasma
transfusion. Four weeks later, 2.9% of those who received the plasma
had been hospitalized for COVID-19, compared to 6.3% of those who
did not receive it. After accounting for individuals' risk factors,
the treatment reduced the risk of hospitalization by 54%, the
researchers said. "COVID-19 convalescent plasma is available in
low-income and middle-income countries, has no patent limitations,
and is relatively inexpensive to produce ... (and probably) less
vulnerable to the emergence of antibody resistance," they added.
Omicron infects more small children, but less harmfully
Among children under age 5 who were ineligible for coronavirus
vaccines, the Omicron variant caused 6- to 8-times more infections
than the Delta variant, but severe COVID-19 was less common with
Omicron, U.S. researchers found.
They reviewed data collected in 2021 and early 2022 on 651,640
children younger than age 5, including 66,692 with Delta infections
and 22,772 with Omicron infections. When Delta was predominant, two
to three children among every 2,000 became infected every day, the
researchers calculated. When Omicron first started to circulate,
that rate rose to roughly five to 13 new infections per day among
every 2,000 children, the researchers reported on Friday in JAMA
Pediatrics. By mid-January 2022, more than 16 of every 2,000 small
children were becoming infected with Omicron every day, with the
highest infection rates seen in children under age 2.
Children infected with Omicron, however, were at significantly lower
risk for severe disease compared to similar children infected with
Delta. The findings may aid considerations about school attendance,
mask use, and vaccine implementation for young children, the
research team said.
Click for a Reuters graphic https://tmsnrt.rs/3c7R3Bl on vaccines in
development.
(Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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