Latest News

New study shows natural immunity to COVID has enduring strength


 

Protection linked to obesity

Another finding that ran against the scientific grain was the data about obesity.

There was a higher and more persistent antibody performance among people with a BMI of 30 kg/m2.

This could relate to greater disease severity and/or a more pronounced initial response to infection among the obese group.

“Our hypothesis is that patients with obesity begin with a more pronounced response – reflected also by the disease manifestation – and the trend of decline is similar, therefore the kinetics of immune response remain higher throughout the study,” Dr. Cohen said.

“The results in the obese group were indeed unexpected and need further research to confirm or dispute,” said Dr. Schaffner, who is also the current medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases. “Obesity does predispose to more severe disease.”

Before the boosters

Along with using participants from only the earlier part of the pandemic, another limitation of the study was that the vaccinated group had only two doses of vaccine; boosters were not given during the time of the study, Dr. Schaffner said.

“Again, not the current situation.”

“That said, the strength and duration of natural immunity provided by the early variants was solid for up to a year, confirming previous reports,” he said.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Case report: Male with acute new-onset suicidal ideation tied to SARS-CoV-2
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Boosted Americans 97 times less likely to die of COVID-19 than unvaccinated
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Updated guidance for COVID vaccination in rheumatology patients arrives amid continued hesitancy
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Children and COVID: New cases down again, but still ‘extremely high’
MDedge Emergency Medicine
‘Substantial’ CVD risks, burden up to a year after COVID-19
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Omicron death rate higher than during Delta surge
MDedge Emergency Medicine
New stroke risk score developed for COVID patients
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Organ transplantation: Unvaccinated need not apply
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Long COVID symptoms linked to effects on vagus nerve
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Children and COVID: Weekly cases down by more than half
MDedge Emergency Medicine