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		Wastewater study technique finds virus variants sooner; many patients 
		are using meds affected by Paxlovid
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		 [July 08, 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.
 
 New wastewater study technique find variants earlier
 
 With just a very small amount of raw sewage and a new analysis 
		technique, researchers can determine the genetic mixture of SARS-CoV-2 
		variants in the community and detect new variants up to 14 days before 
		they start showing up on patients' nasal swabs, according to a new 
		report.
 
 Until recently, levels of SARS-CoV-2 genetic material in wastewater 
		could help track the distribution and transmission of infections but did 
		not yield information about individual variants. Tests of a new method 
		for wastewater genomic surveillance at the University of California, San 
		Diego campus from November 2020 to September 2021 detected the Epsilon, 
		Alpha and Delta variants "earlier and more consistently than clinical 
		samples, and identified multiple instances of virus spread" that were 
		not detected with traditional monitoring, researchers reported on 
		Thursday in Nature. "Further sampling of wastewater across San Diego 
		from September 2021 to February 2022 detected the presence of the 
		Omicron variant more than 10 days before the first clinical detection in 
		the city," they said.
 
		
		 
		Monitoring wastewater from individual buildings or places like schools 
		and airports could potentially "be used to better direct public health 
		interventions... in real-time," the researchers suggest. "In a lot of 
		places, standard clinical surveillance for new variants of concern is 
		not only slow but extremely cost-prohibitive," coauthor Kristian 
		Andersen of Scripps Research in La Jolla, California said in a 
		statement. "But with this new tool, you can take one wastewater sample 
		and basically profile the whole city." 
 Patients are taking drugs that interact with Paxlovid
 
 A sizable proportion of older patients may be taking medications that 
		interact with Paxlovid, Pfizer Inc's antiviral treatment for COVID-19, 
		according to a new report.
 
 Paxlovid has been approved for early outpatient treatment of COVID-19 to 
		prevent severe disease. Using national databases in Denmark, researchers 
		estimated the proportion of Danish people over age 65 at risk of 
		significant drug interactions if they take Paxlovid. Blood thinners that 
		should not be taken with Paxlovid were being used by 20% of people over 
		age 65 and by 30% of people over age 80, they reported on Tuesday in the 
		International Journal of Infectious Diseases.
 
		[to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            
			A woman reacts as she receives her dose of coronavirus disease 
			(COVID-19) booster vaccine at a vaccination centre in Karachi, 
			Pakistan June 27, 2022. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro 
            
			 
		Cholesterol-lowering statins that should not be taken with Paxlovid were 
		being used by up to 18% of people older than 65, and more than 20% were 
		using drugs like analgesics or heart medications that might require dose 
		adjustments.  
		Before prescribing Paxlovid, "the patient's full medical history 
		including herbals, over the counter and recreational drugs, must be 
		known and co-treatment carefully managed by the treating physician, or 
		by a specialist, to avoid detrimental effects," the researchers 
		concluded. On Wednesday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration 
			ruled that pharmacists can prescribe Paxlovid. In response, American 
			Medical Association president Dr. Jack Resnick Jr. said that 
			"whenever possible, prescribing decisions should be made by a 
			physician with knowledge of a patient's medical history and the 
			ability to follow up."
 Second booster yields higher marginal benefit in elderly
 
 Frail elderly people may get more protection against COVID-19 from a 
			fourth dose of an mRNA vaccine from Pfizer/BioNTech or Moderna than 
			they got from their third dose, new findings suggest.
 
 Researchers studied 61,344 residents of long-term care facilities in 
			Ontario after Omicron became the dominant coronavirus variant. More 
			than 13,650 residents tested positive during the study. For those 
			whose most recent shot was a third dose at least 12 weeks earlier, a 
			fourth dose of an mRNA vaccine was 19% more effective against 
			infection, 31% more effective against symptomatic infection, and 40% 
			more effective against severe illness from the virus, researchers 
			reported on Wednesday in The BMJ.
 
 The extra protection from the fourth dose against all outcomes was 
			lower when the third dose had been received less than three months 
			earlier, although the optimal dosing interval and the duration of 
			protection remain unknown, the researchers said.
 
 For a Reuters graphic on vaccine in development: https://graphics.reuters.com/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS/VACCINE-TRACKER/xegpbqnlovq/
 
 (Reporting by Nancy Lapid; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
 
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