Body’s immune defence against virus may be short-lived: experts

Published July 15, 2020
“Most people make them (antibodies), but often they can wane rather rapidly, suggesting there could be little immunity,” said Daniel Altmann. — Reuters/File
“Most people make them (antibodies), but often they can wane rather rapidly, suggesting there could be little immunity,” said Daniel Altmann. — Reuters/File

LONDON: Emerging evidence that the body’s immune defence against Covid-19 may be short-lived makes it even harder for vaccine developers to come up with shots fully able to protect people in future waves of infection, scientists said on Tuesday.

Preliminary studies in China, Germany, Britain and elsewhere have found that patients infected with the novel coronavirus make protective antibodies as part of their immune system’s defences, but these appear to last only a few months.

“Most people make them (antibodies), but often they can wane rather rapidly, suggesting there could be little immunity,” said Daniel Altmann, a professor of immunology at Imperial College London.

That raises big problems for developers of potential Covid-19 vaccines, experts say — and for public health authorities seeking to deploy them to protect populations from future waves of the pandemic.

“It does mean that the over-reliance on a vaccine (to control the pandemic) is not wise,” said Stephen Griffin, a Leeds University associate professor of medicine.

To be truly effective, Covid-19 vaccines “will either need to generate stronger and longer lasting protection ... or they may need to be given regularly”, he said.

“And those things are not trivial.” More than 100 research teams and companies around the world are seeking to develop vaccines against Covid-19, and at least 17 are already in human trials to test efficacy.

Published in Dawn, July 15th, 2020

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