August 23, 2021 Puzzle Piece
COVID-19 Survivors Have Broad, Longer-Term Immunity
by: Rajee Suri
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August 7, 2021 Updated: August 8, 2021
People who have recovered from COVID-19 retain broad and effective longer-term immunity to the disease, according to a new study.
Findings
of the study, which is the most comprehensive of its kind so far, have
implications for expanding understanding about human immune memory as
well as future vaccine development for coronaviruses.
For the longitudinal study in Cell Reports Medicine,
researchers looked at 254 patients with mostly mild to moderate
symptoms of SARS-CoV-2 infection over a period of more than eight months
(250 days) and found that their immune response to the virus remained durable and strong.
The
findings are reassuring, especially given early reports during the
pandemic that protective neutralizing antibodies didn’t last in COVID-19
patients, said Rafi Ahmed, director of the Emory University Vaccine
Center and a lead author of the paper.
“The
study serves as a framework to define and predict long-lived immunity
to SARS-CoV-2 after natural infection. We also saw indications in this
phase that natural immunity could continue to persist,” Ahmed said.
The research team will continue to evaluate this cohort over the next few years.
The researchers found that not only did the immune response increase with disease severity but
also with each decade of age regardless of disease severity, suggesting
that there are additional unknown factors influencing age-related
differences in COVID-19 responses.
In
following the patients for months, researchers got a more nuanced view
of how the immune system responds to COVID-19 infection. The picture
that emerges indicates that the body’s defense shield not only produces
an array of neutralizing antibodies but activates certain T and B cells
to establish immune memory, offering more sustained defenses against
reinfection.
“We
saw that antibody responses, especially IgG antibodies, were not only
durable in the vast majority of patients but decayed at a slower rate
than previously estimated, which suggests that patients are generating
longer-lived plasma cells that can neutralize the SARS-CoV-2 spike
protein.”
Ahmed
said investigators were surprised to see that convalescent participants
also displayed increased immunity against common human coronaviruses as
well as SARS-CoV-1, a close relative of the current coronavirus. The
study suggests that patients who survived COVID-19 are likely to also
possess protective immunity even against some SARS-CoV-2 variants.
“Vaccines
that target other parts of the virus rather than just the spike protein
may be more helpful in containing infection as SARS-CoV-2 variants
overtake the prevailing strains,” Ahmed said. “This could pave the way
for us to design vaccines that address multiple coronaviruses.”
The
researchers said the study more comprehensively identifies the adaptive
immune components leading to recovery, and that it will serve as a
benchmark for immune memory induced by SARS-CoV-2 vaccines.
“We
can build on these results to define the progression to long-lived
immunity against the new coronavirus, which can guide rational responses
when future outbreaks occur,” Ahmed said.
The
National Institutes of Health funded the work, which is a collaboration
between Emory University and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
in Seattle, Washington.
This article was originally published by Rajee Suri. Republished via Futurity.org under Creative Commons License 4.0.
Rajee Suri
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