As the COVID-19 vaccine rollout gathers pace, a population is at risk of being left behind: the millions of immunocompromised people around the globe who lack fully functional immune systems.
For them, vaccines may not be as effective, because they are less capable of making their own antibodies to neutralize the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Instead, pharmaceutical companies around the world are racing to develop alternative treatments that bypass the immune system altogether.
This makes it essential to start looking for ways to beat the virus with other tools, and fortunately, a new, unique product has come out of the high-tech microbiology labs in Israel that you can add to your defenses. The product is called Enovid, and we will tell you more about it in this blog.
First, a quick look at why it may be necessary to shift the focus away from vaccines as the only way to prevent the coronavirus pandemic from affecting immunocompromised people.
Breaking news
A new study published on medRxiv describes how immunocompromised vaccine recipients may not always respond as expected to the COVID-19 vaccine. The comparison was between one hundred immunocompromised patients who had received 2-dose vaccinations and 16 healthy healthcare workers. In the results, all of the healthy individuals showed the expected positive response post vaccination, while only 50% of the immunocompromised patients show an antibody (humoral) immune response. The conclusion was that 21% of fully vaccinated immunocompromised patients are likely vulnerable to SARS-CoV2 infection. The US Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on July 7th 2021 also warned people who are immunocompromised that the Covid-19 vaccine may not have been effective for them and encouraged them to take precautions: “People who are immunocompromised should be counseled about the potential for reduced immune responses to COVID-19 vaccines and to follow current prevention measures (including wearing a mask, staying 6 feet apart from others they don’t live with, and avoiding crowds and poorly ventilated indoor spaces) to protect themselves against COVID-19 until advised otherwise by their healthcare provider,” according to the CDC’s website.Who is vulnerable?
Around 2.7% of the US population, amounting to more than nine million people, is classified as immunocompromised. According to CDC, the issue of immunocompromise arises from a variety of conditions, mainly:- Solid tumor and hematologic malignancies
- Receipt of solid-organ or hematopoietic stem cell transplant
- Severe primary immunodeficiencies
- Persons living with HIV
- Treatment with immunosuppressive medications such as cancer chemotherapeutic agents, TNF blockers, certain biologic agents (e.g., rituximab), and high-dose corticosteroids
- Prolonged SARS-CoV-2 infection and shedding (in other words, spreading their own infection by ejecting the virus in sneezing, breathing and coughing)
- Viral evolution (such as was seen between the first form of SARS-CoV-2, which we now call Alpha, and the latest form, called Delta) during infection and treatment (hospitalized patients)
- Low antibody/neutralization titers (meaning low levels of the antibodies that bind to the infecting virus and neutralize it) to SARS-CoV-2 variants
- More likely to transmit SARS-CoV-2 to household contacts
- More likely to have breakthrough infection (meaning an infection of a person who has already had either both shots of the vaccine, or was previously infected and recovered):
- 44% of hospitalized breakthrough cases are immunocompromised people in a US study
- 40% of hospitalized breakthrough cases are immunocompromised people in an Israeli study