A recent study found that antibodies against the novel coronavirus wane at different rates, lasting for mere days in some individuals while persisting in others for decades, supposedly according to COVID-19 severity.
Scientists, including those from Duke-NUS Medical School in Singapore, followed 164 COVID-19 patients for six to nine months, analysing their blood for neutralising antibodies against the SARS-CoV-2 virus, their T cells and immune system signalling molecules.
They then used this information to train a machine-learning algorithm to predict the trajectories of people's neutralising antibodies over time.
The research, published in The Lancet Microbe journal, noted that recovered patients with low levels of neutralising antibodies may still be protected from reinfection if they have robust immunity in the form of the body's T cells.
Based on the analysis, the researchers categorised people into five groups depending on how long their antibodies lasted.
The first group, they said, included those who never developed detectable neutralising antibodies – also called the 'negative' group – and comprised 11.6 per cent of the patients in the study. The 'rapid waning' group, which included 26.8 per cent of the patients, had varying early levels of antibodies that waned quickly.
According to the researchers, the 'slow waning' group, which included 29 per cent of the participants, tested mostly positive for antibodies at six months. The 'persistent' group, comprising 31.7 per cent of the individuals, showed little change in their antibody levels up to 180 days and, they said, adding that the 'delayed response' group (1.8 per cent) showed a significant rise in neutralising antibodies during late convalescence.
"The key message from this study is that the longevity of functional neutralising antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 can vary greatly and it is important to monitor this at an individual level," said Professor Wang Linfa, from Duke-NUS' Emerging Infectious Diseases (EID) Programme, a corresponding author of the study.
According to the study, patients, including those from the 'negative group', displayed sustained T-cell immunity six months after initial infection, indicating that individuals may still be protected if they have a robust T-cell immunity when the neutralising antibody level is low.
Based on the results, the scientists emphasised the importance of public health and social measures in ongoing pandemic outbreak response. They said the presence of T-cell immunity provides hope of longer-term protection, adding that more studies are needed to confirm the findings.
Since antibodies wane faster in some individuals, the scientists believe re-infection may occur in subsequent waves of infection. They stated that if immunity provided via vaccinations also wanes like naturally-produced antibodies, annual vaccine administration could be necessary to prevent future outbreaks of COVID-19.