Latest News

Omicron breakthrough cases boost protection, studies say


 

Vaccinated people who have a breakthrough case of Omicron will have better protection against COVID-19 variants than vaccinated people who receive a booster shot, two preprint studies show.

The University of Washington, Seattle, working with Vir Biotechnology of San Francisco, looked at blood samples of vaccinated people who had breakthrough cases of Delta or Omicron and compared the samples with three other groups: people who caught COVID and were later vaccinated, vaccinated people who were never infected, and people who were infected and never vaccinated.

The vaccinated people who had a breakthrough case of Omicron produced antibodies that helped protect against coronavirus variants, whereas unvaccinated people who caught Omicron didn’t produce as many antibodies, the study showed.

BioNTech, the German biotechnology company, found that people who’d been double and triple vaccinated and then became infected with Omicron had a better B-cell response than people who’d gotten a booster shot but had not been infected.

The University of Washington research team also came up with similar findings about B cells.

The findings don’t mean people should deliberately try to become infected with COVID, said Alexandra Walls, PhD, one of the University of Washington scientists, according to Business Standard.

But the study does indicate “that we are at the point where we may want to consider having a different vaccine to boost people,” said David Veesler, PhD, of the University of Washington team.

“We should think about breakthrough infections as essentially equivalent to another dose of vaccine,” John Wherry, PhD, a professor and director of the Institute for Immunology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, told Business Standard. Dr. Wherry was not involved in the studies but reviewed the BioNTech study.

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

Recommended Reading

COVID-19 again the third-leading cause of U.S. deaths
MDedge Psychiatry
Substance use disorders increase risk for death from COVID-19
MDedge Psychiatry
2020 presidential election tied to spike in cardiac events
MDedge Psychiatry
One in four feel fully recovered following COVID-19 hospitalization
MDedge Psychiatry
Almost 60% of U.S. population has been infected by COVID-19: CDC
MDedge Psychiatry
When it’s not long, but medium COVID?
MDedge Psychiatry
Severe COVID-19 adds 20 years of cognitive aging: Study
MDedge Psychiatry
Do psychotropic meds raise or lower COVID risk in psych patients?
MDedge Psychiatry
Most COVID-19 survivors return to work within 2 years
MDedge Psychiatry
Neuropsychiatric risks of COVID-19: New data
MDedge Psychiatry