Ending the COVID-19 pandemic will require long-lived immunity to SARS-CoV-2. Here, we evaluate 254 COVID-19 patients longitudinally up to eight months and find durable broad-based immune responses. SARS-CoV-2 spike binding and neutralizing antibodies exhibit a bi-phasic decay with an extended half-life of >200 days suggesting the generation of longer-lived plasma cells. SARS-CoV-2 infection also boosts antibody titers to SARS-CoV-1 and common betacoronaviruses. In addition, spike-specific IgG+ memory B cells persist, which bodes well for a rapid antibody response upon virus re-exposure or vaccination. Virus-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells are polyfunctional and maintained with an estimated half-life of 200 days. Interestingly, CD4+ T cell responses equally target several SARS-CoV-2 proteins, whereas the CD8+ T cell responses preferentially target the nucleoprotein, highlighting the potential importance of including the nucleoprotein in future vaccines. Taken together, these results suggest that broad and effective immunity may persist long-term in recovered COVID-19 patients.
SUMMARYEnding the COVID-19 pandemic will require long-lived immunity to SARS-CoV-2. We evaluated 254 COVID-19 patients longitudinally from early infection and for eight months thereafter and found a predominant broad-based immune memory response. SARS-CoV-2 spike binding and neutralizing antibodies exhibited a bi-phasic decay with an extended half-life of >200 days suggesting the generation of longer-lived plasma cells. In addition, there was a sustained IgG+ memory B cell response, which bodes well for a rapid antibody response upon virus re-exposure. Polyfunctional virus-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells were also generated and maintained with an estimated half-life of 200 days. Interestingly, the CD4+ T cell response equally targeted several SARS-CoV-2 proteins, whereas the CD8+ T cell response preferentially targeted the nucleoprotein, highlighting the importance of including the nucleoprotein as a potential vaccine antigen. Taken together, these results suggest that broad and effective immunity may persist long-term in recovered COVID-19 patients.
BACKGROUND A safe, effective vaccine is essential to end HIV. A canarypox/protein HIV vaccine regimen showed modest efficacy at reducing infection in Thailand. An analogous regimen using HIV-1 subtype C virus demonstrated potent humoral and cellular responses in a Phase 1/2a trial and triggered a Phase 2b/3 double-blinded trial to assess the safety and efficacy of this regimen in South Africa. METHODS We enrolled and randomized 5,404 healthy, HIV-uninfected 18-35-year olds at 14 sites to vaccine (2,704 participants) or placebo (2,700 participants) between 26 October 2016 and 21 June 2019. The vaccine regimen consisted of two ALVAC-HIV (vCP2438) (expressing HIV-1 subtype C env, clade B gp41 , gag and pro) immunizations at months 0 and 1, with booster immunizations of ALVAC-HIV plus bivalent subtype C gp120 protein/MF59 adjuvant at months 3, 6, 12 and 18. Efficacy was evaluated by HIV testing every 3 months. RESULTS In January 2020, pre-specified non-efficacy criteria were met at an interim analysis; further vaccinations were subsequently halted. The vaccines were safe and well-tolerated in the study population (median age 24, 70% female-sex-at-birth). Over the primary 24-month follow-up, there were 133 infections among placebo recipients and 138 among vaccinees (hazard ratio = 1.02; 95%CI, 0.81-1.30; P=0.84). Pre-specified subgroup analyses demonstrated no difference in efficacy by sex or when restricting to follow-up post-4 th vaccination, and no difference amongst female-sex-at-birth by age, BMI, prevalent STIs, behavioral risk score or region. CONCLUSIONS The ALVAC/gp120 regimen did not prevent HIV infection in South Africans despite prior evidence of immunogenicity. ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02968849)
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