Unfortunately, Hong Kong just reported the world’s first covid-19 reinfection

It looks like that the worst has finally arrived, because covid-19 reinfection is possible and the first case was just reported in Hong Kong.
covid-19 reinfection
Covid-19 immunity might not last long after all. Image courtesy: Shutterstock
Team Health Shots Updated: 25 Aug 2020, 15:09 pm IST
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It looks like we desperately need a solution for covid-19 because the news coming in from the eastern peripheral of the world is not so great. Researchers in Hong Kong on Monday identified what they said was the first confirmed case worldwide of covid-19 reinfection, raising questions about the durability of immunity—whether acquired naturally or with a vaccine.

This is what the researchers have to say
“Our study proves that immunity for covid infection is not lifelong; in fact, reinfection can occur quite quickly,” said Kelvin Kai-Wang To, a microbiologist at Hong Kong University’s Faculty of Medicine and lead author of a forthcoming study that details the findings.

“Covid-19 patients should not assume after they recover that they won’t get infected again,” he told AFP in an interview.

Even people who have shaken off the virus should practice social distancing, wear masks and practise hand washing, he advised.

Screening is important according to the researchers
Researchers said that patients should also get tested if suspect symptoms appear. The case came to light when a 33-year old resident of Hong Kong passed through mandatory screening earlier this month at the Hong Kong airport on his way back from Europe. His PCR swab test was positive.

covid-19 reinfection
Screening is very important to fight against covid-19. Image courtesy: Shutterstock

This came as a surprise because the man had contracted—and recovered from—a covid-19 infection four-and-a-half months earlier, and was assumed to have immunity, especially after such a brief time since the infection.

To find out whether he had suffered a relapse or had been infected again, the team of researchers sequenced the two virus strains and compared their genomes, or genetic coding.

The two viral signatures were “completely different”, and belonged to different coronavirus lineages, or clades.

The first closely resembled strains collected in March and April, and the second strain matched the virus found in Europe—where the patient had just been visiting —in July and August.

“The virus mutates all the time,” said To. “It is very unlikely that the patient would have gotten the second virus during the first infection.”

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The fact that a blood sample—taken shortly after the positive test at the airport—showed no antibodies is a further indication that the second virus had not been lingering unnoticed for months. 

“This is certainly stronger evidence of reinfection than some of the previous reports because it uses the genome sequence of the virus to separate the two infections,” said Jeffrey Barret, a senior scientific consultant for the COVID-19 Genome Project at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, commenting on the study.

Here are the broader implications of a SARS-CoV-2 reinfection
Uptil now, there have been many cases of suspected reinfection, but none were able to rule out the possibility that the virus remained latent to re-emerge after weeks or months.

covid-19 infection
Blood tests can identify the severity of the risk of contracting the disease. Image Courtesy: Shutterstock

But expert opinions differ on how alarmed the world should be by the new findings, which will be published in the peer-reviewed medical journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.

“This is a worrying finding for two reasons,” said David Strain, a clinical senior lecturer at the University of Exeter Medical School.

“It suggests that previous infections are not protective. It also raises the possibility that vaccinations may not provide the hope that we have been waiting for.”

If antibodies don’t provide lasting protection, “we will need to revert to a strategy of viral near-elimination in order to return to a normal life”, he added.

In the same vein, To said that scientists developing vaccines should look not just at the immune response, but at the duration of protection from infection. 

But other researchers suggested that the case uncovered was far more likely to be extremely rare.

“It is to be expected that the virus will naturally mutate over time,” said microbiologist Brendan Wren of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

“This is a very rare example of re-infection and it should not negate the global drive to develop covid-19 vaccines.” 

covid-19 reinfection
2020 might not see a ready-to-use vaccine for covid-19. Image courtesy: Shutterstock

Barrett agreed, saying: “This may be very rare, and it may be that second infections —when they do occur—are not serious,” he said.

Indeed, the reinfection of the Hong Kong patient was completely asymptomatic. But this could also mean that such an outcome may be more common than suspected, said To.

“People don’t get tested all the time after they recover, especially if they have no symptoms,” he said by phone.

(With inputs from AFP)

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