Established in 2020 Wednesday, April 17, 2024


COVID-19 antibody study shows downside of not receiving second shot
A health worker prepares a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine dose at the Ajame main market on August 27, 2021 during a massive COVID-19 vaccination campaign in Abidjan. Issouf Sanogo / AFP.



EVANSTON, IL.- A new study shows that two months after the second Pfizer/Moderna vaccination, antibody response decreases 20% in adults with prior cases of COVID-19. The study also tests how well current vaccines resist emerging variants.

The Northwestern University study underscores the importance of receiving a second dose of vaccine, not only because it is commonly known that immunity from vaccines wanes over time, but also because of the risk posed by emerging variants, including the highly contagious delta variant.

The study also showed that prior exposure to SARS-CoV-2 does not guarantee a high level of antibodies, nor does it guarantee a robust antibody response to the first vaccine dose. This directly contradicts the assumption that contracting COVID will naturally make someone immune to re-infection. The findings further support vaccination (and two doses), even for people who have contracted the virus previously.

A team of scientists, including biological anthropologist Thomas McDade and pharmacologist Alexis Demonbreun, tested blood samples from adults who had tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 to measure how long the immunity benefits of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines last and how well they protect from newer variants.

Study participants were selected from a racially and ethnically diverse community-based sample of Chicago-area adults recruited at the start of the pandemic. Using at-home antibody testing kits developed in the lab, participants submitted blood samples two to three weeks after their first and second dose of vaccination and two months after the second dose.

Antibody response after second shot
In the lab, the researchers tested for neutralizing antibodies by measuring whether the blood sample could inhibit the interaction between the virus’ spike protein and the ACE2 receptor – this interaction is how the virus causes an infection once it enters the body.

“When we tested blood samples from participants collected about three weeks after their second vaccine dose, the average level of inhibition was 98%, indicating a very high level of neutralizing antibodies,” said McDade, professor of anthropology in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and a faculty fellow with the University’s Institute for Policy Research.

The scientists tested emerging variants B.1.1351 (South Africa), B.1.1.7 (UK) and P.1 (Brazil) and found the level of inhibition to viral variants was significantly lower, ranging from 67% to 92%.




Antibody response declined after two months
In testing samples collected two months after the second dose, they found antibody responses declined by about 20%.

The researchers found that the antibody response to vaccination varied based on history of prior infection.

Individuals with clinically confirmed cases of COVID-19 and multiple symptoms had a higher level of response than those who tested positive but had mild symptoms or were asymptomatic.

“Many people, and many doctors, are assuming that any prior exposure to SARS-CoV-2 will confer immunity to re-infection. Based on this logic, some people with prior exposure don’t think they need to get vaccinated. Or if they do get vaccinated, they think that they only need the first dose of the two-dose Pfizer/Moderna vaccines,” McDade said.

“Our study shows that prior exposure to SARS-CoV-2 does not guarantee a high level of antibodies, nor does it guarantee a robust antibody response to the first vaccine dose. For people who had mild or asymptomatic infections, their antibody response to vaccination is essentially the same as it is for people who have not been previously exposed.”

McDade adds that although the research was conducted prior to the emergence of the delta virus, the conclusions are similar.

“As far as protection goes after vaccination, the story is the same for all the variants, including delta — the vaccine provides good protection, but not as good protection as the original version of the virus for which the vaccine was designed. Combine that with the fact that immunity wanes over time, you get increased vulnerability to breakthrough infection.

“So, it’s two strikes right now — delta plus waning immunity among the first wave of the vaccinated,” McDade said.

The study “Durability of antibody response to vaccination and surrogate neutralization of emerging variants based on SARS-CoV-2 exposure history” published in the journal Scientific Reports.







Today's News

August 31, 2021

Turning immune cells into killers

COVID-19 antibody study shows downside of not receiving second shot

Cold planets exist throughout the galaxy, even in the galactic bulge

Space mission tests NREL perovskite solar cells

Study reveals decline in predatory fish catch on the southeastern Brazilian Coast

Study reveals evidence Mercury's mantle goes with the flow

'Smart' shirt keeps tabs on the heart

S.Africa scientists monitoring new coronavirus variant

New mathematical solutions to an old problem in astronomy

Synthetic biology enables microbes to build muscle

Landmark study shows simple salt swap could prevent millions of deaths each year

Drug delivery capsule could replace injections for protein drugs

Breast milk proven to enhance heart performance in premature babies

Bowfin genome reveals old dogfish can teach researchers new tricks

How star-making pollutes the cosmos

The flower clock: How a small protein helps flowers to develop right and on time

Can damaged hearts heal themselves?

Charging stations can combine hydrogen production and energy storage



 


Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez



Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the ResearchNews newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful