Saturday, December 3, 2022

Next Time ‘Round




No, COVID-19 is not worse if you get it twice! Also lots about vaccines and long COVID, quick updates on variants and the state of the pandemic, plus extras on masks, Paxlovid, Rochelle Walensky, and one small but egregious conspiracy theory.


Treatment news



Monoclonal antibodies: The CDC has thrown cold water on the modest optimism I expressed in my last post, by saying BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 are likely resistant to bebtelovimab, and also, with BA.4.6, BA.2.75.2, and BF.7, to Evusheld. Arggggggh! In mid-November BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 officially overtook BA.5 in the US. 

Paxlovid triumphs: We’ve long hoped that antiviral treatment might reduce the risk of long COVID. Now a large study from the US Veterans Administration, available as a preprint, says yes, reporting that antiviral treatment reduced by 26% the risk of still having symptoms at 90 days. Two caveats. One: VA patients are mostly elderly men, whereas long COVID mostly strikes middle-aged women. The other: diagnoses were made by chart review, without interviews or even questionnaires. Charts are great at detecting heart disease, pulmonary embolism, etc., but they’re unlikely to record such core long COVID symptoms as fatigue, shortness of breath, and brain fog. Nonetheless, I will change my clinical practice on the basis of this study. Until now I have advised older patients with mild, rapidly-improving COVID-19 symptoms that they can skip Paxlovid. Now I will start saying take it.

Molnupiravir hits the skids: Remember Merck’s antiviral? The one that (as per my own Letter to the Editor) didn’t even work on Delta, much less Omicron? People feared its use might breed new, resistant variants. Now it seems that is probably starting to happen.

 

Second acts



We’ve seen ample evidence that COVID-19 is milder the second time around, as summarized in a pre-Omicron literature review. An Italian study before variants emerged and a slightly later Qatari study both found repeat infections fully 90% less likely to result in hospitalization or death. And an American study of Emergency Room patients said second bouts entailed lower risks of pneumonia, heart failure, and kidney damage. 

But now a massive study from the US Veterans Administration seems to say exactly the opposite: repeat attacks of COVID-19 are more severe, for both acute outcomes and long COVID. Particularly puzzling since the study extends well into the period of dominance of the milder Omicron variant. News outlets immediately blasted headlines such as “Repeat COVID is riskier than first infection, study finds” and “Each SARS-CoV-2 reinfection causes more severe disease.” The authors themselves have fed the flamesHOWEVER: they’re all dead wrong, and the contradiction with earlier studies is only apparent. That’s because the VA paper did not compare people with reinfection to those without reinfection. It was based on a database of medical records, so it could include only people sick enough to have required medical attention, which especially in the Omicron era is a small minority. As Jeremy Faust points out, the only lesson to draw is “repeat coronavirus infections are not good, especially for older people who are likely to have existing medical problems (i.e., Veterans Administration patients). This is not exactly breaking news.” 

 

Vaccine and prevention news



Bivalents in the lab: Research results are mixed. One New York group reported that the bivalent BA.4/5 Pfizer and Moderna boosters induced no more neutralizing antibodies against Omicron BA.5 than a 4th dose of the original monovalent vaccine. Researchers from Boston did find modest antibody superiority for bivalent BA.5 boosters, but no better than for bivalent BA.1 vaccines. Moderna says its BA.1 bivalent booster induced 75% more anti-Omicron neutralizing antibodies than the original monovalent booster, but this advantage did not translate into protection against infection or clinical COVID-19. Moderna also claims its bivalent boosters induce a “robust” neutralizing antibody response against BQ.1.1, but the titres they report look minimal to me. Pfizer and BioNTech now say anti-BA.4/5 neutralizing antibodies rose 4 times higher after the BA.4/5 bivalent vaccine than after their monovalent booster, without reporting real-world outcomes. 

Bivalents vs. monovalents in the real world: Among Israeli healthcare workers, a fourth dose of the original monovalent Pfizer vaccine boosted protection against Omicron infection substantially, but only for 3 months. And we finally have some concrete evidence in favor of bivalent vaccines, in the form of a very recent CDC study. Twenty-four percent of people with positive PCR swabs were unvaccinated, 72% had received 2-4 doses of monovalent vaccines, and 5% had received a bivalent booster. Among vaccinated patients, the added protection from the bivalent booster varied according the time since a person’s latest monovalent dose. When the last monovalent dose was just 2-3 months earlier, the bivalent booster increased protection against infection by about 30%. But when it had been 8 months earlier and had likely worn off, the added protection was 43%-56%. This does show that bivalent boosters increase protection against COVID-19 above and beyond the effect of previous vaccination. It does not tell us whether another dose of the original monovalent vaccine might have done the same, or what the effect is on new-entry variantssuch as BQ.1 and XBB, or how long the boost will last, given that the bivalent boosters – given an average of 4 weeks earlier – were at their peak.

Brass tacks: As of mid-October the World Health Organization was agnostic, saying the data did not support using bivalent vaccine boosters rather than ancestral-virus-only boosters. Bottom line: if you’re at increased risk, because of age or otherwise, get a booster now, ahead of any winter surge. It probably makes little difference which one. 

Beta boosters: European makers Sanofi-GSK have thrown their hat in the ring with a monovalent booster, “VidPrevtyn Beta,” based on the Beta (South African) spike protein. It produced 2.5 times more Omicron BA.1 and BA.4/5 neutralizing antibodies than did a third dose of Pfizer, and has already been approved by the European Medicines Agency. We’ll see whether it catches on.

Sniffed: People have dreamed of alternative vaccine routes for a long time now, thinking that oral or nasal vaccines could be more effective than injections, by increasing IgA “mucosal” antibodies and possibly better stimulating T-cell immunity. Now an intranasal vaccine booster using the spike protein has been shown to be effective – in mice – against multiple SARS-CoV-2 strains. Eric Topol goes so far as to say, “This is the variant-proof booster we need now to help prevent infections & spread.” Lets hope so, with the caveat that mice aren’t men. Unfortunately the resistance of congressional Republicans to authorizing further pandemic spending means work on American mucosal vaccines is likely to proceed not at warp speed but at a snail’s pace. And in a bizarre twist, Pfizer seems to prefer to throw tens of millions of leftover doses down the drain rather than allow a few of them to be used for research; Moderna has been marginally more cooperative.

Puffed: The Chinese company CanSino created an injectable viral vector COVID-19 vaccine barely efficacious enough to meet World Health Organization criteria. Now it’s developed an inhaled version that will soon be offered as a booster in several Chinese cities, delivered using a device vaguely resembling an overgrown asthma inhaler. It is said to elicit somewhat more Omicron BA.1 neutralizing antibodies than Sinovac – a low bar – but in the absence of even a preprinted manuscript it’s not clear whether the antibodies fade rapidly or persist for more than 6 months.

Mix-and-match immunityA study of California state prison inmates has found that Delta-variant infection and three-dose vaccination each gave approximately 40% protection against infection (or reinfection) in the early Omicron period – with a combination of infection plus triple vaccination lowering risk by nearly 85%. Pre-Delta infections were somewhat less protective, and mere double vaccination much less protective. The researchers also present results among prison staff, but I find them uninterpretable.

Children: A study from Qatar confirms that 2 doses of a Pfizer vaccine do very little to prevent Omicron infection. In school-age children a peak of 50% effectiveness fell to practically nil by 3 months, with even less protection in older, larger kids (Pfizer for kids is a fixed low dose). The primary series worked a bit better in adolescents, who received the 30-mcg adult dose, and lasted somewhat longer. The modest, brief effect against Omicron is confirmed by an American study – which did find that one Omicron infection was very protective against a second one, and that, as usual, vaccination plus infection is even better.

The global South: The World Health Organization has chosen to see the glass half-full, emphasizing the progress that’s been made against the pandemic. But only 20% of people in low-income countries have received a primary vaccine course, versus 75% in high-income countries. That’s triple where we were at the beginning of March, but still. Note that this February South African scientists announced that they had succeeded in replicating Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine. But 9 months later, they’re saying it will be yet another 18 months before their product becomes commercially available. What value will it have then? Moderna immediately sued to block the project and, it seems, is still trying

Exercise: A review article concludes that regular physical activity reduces the risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection slightly, the risk of severe disease by a third, and the risk of death by an astonishing 43%. Eyeballing their Figure 3, I’d guess those benefits only kick in at around 2 hours a week of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise.

 

Iron men, iron women



Some people intensely exposed to COVID-19 never catch it themselves. They seem to be rare birds in the Omicron era, with my friends and patients generally saying not “I got COVID,” but “We got COVID.” But a CDC study from this spring showed that only half of people living in the same home as a COVID-19 case ever caught the infection, and that even in households where the patient wasn’t isolated and didn’t wear a mask that rate only reached two-thirds. As you see from the graphic, the CDC emphasized the downside of those findings. But what I find amazing is on the contrary how many of those intimate contacts stayed well.

 

The state of the pandemic


 

Just while the term “post-pandemic” is being bandied about, most experts (though not all) are asking not whether we’re in store for a winter surge, but just how bad it will be. It’s already hit in Italy, where the number of confirmed cases has quadrupled in the last month, and the number of deaths has nearly doubled, with one in 5 cases a reinfection. Here, for Italian speakers, is a detailed report.

In the US the official number of new cases has remained stable, at around one-fifth Italy’s rate per capita. Deaths, however, are running neck and neck. What that suggests is that most infected Americans aren’t reporting their positive home tests to the authorities. As of this week more than 60% of US cases are caused by BQ.1 and BQ.1.1, but in Italy, the latest stats say 2/3 of cases are still BA.5, 1/3 BQ.1.

Black Americans used to die disproportionately from COVID-19, but now the tide has turned, with whites 40% morelikely to die. The reason? Vaccine hesitancy. Though once higher percentages were found among blacks, diehard novaxxers are now much more likely to be Trumpy whites. And though most deaths now occur among the vaccinated, vaccine holdouts are 5 times as likely to die of COVID-19 as someone who’s fully vaccinated, and 10 times as likely as someone with two boosters. (Thanks to Lisa Paglin and Marianna Brilla for the 1924 cartoon.)

The United States saw more deaths per capita last winter than any other large wealthy country: twice as many as Italy, 3 times as many as Canada, more than 10 times as many as Japan. Mortality was lowest in states with high vaccination rates, but even there it surpassed other countries.’ The reason is probably that the US has lagged in giving the boostersso crucial for combatting Omicron.

 

Back to basics



Hard evidence about masking is scarce, and now that everybody has been going barefaced a new New England Journal of Medicine article is very timely. Lifting of mask mandates in some but not all Massachusetts school districts provided a neat natural experiment, with clear results. Districts where masking was made optional had 44.9 more cases per 1000 students and staff than districts where it remained obligatory, which nearly doubled the case rate, even though schools that kept mandates had worse physical condition, more low-income students, and more crowded classrooms. Students had 39.9 excess cases per 1000, while staff, who as adults risked more, had 81.7. Though I strongly favor indoor masking I was somewhat surprised at these results, since data have suggested that kids with COVID-19 usually catch the infection not in the classroom but at friends’ homes.

 

Variant watch



Twelve months into the Omicron era its descendants are breeding like rabbits. No sooner had BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 appeared on the scene when XBB popped up, apparently even more transmissible and resistant to antibodies. It’s a chimeric blend of BA.2.10.1 and BA.2.75, whose latest subsubvariants include CH.1 and CH.1.1. In early October XBB was only causing about 1.3% of new cases globally. Despite claims on social media, there is no evidence it is more severe than other Omicron subvariants. For everything there is to know about Aeterna, Gryphon, Mimas, Pisces, and more see one review article from October 3rd, and another from October 31st that claimed 390 Omicron subvariants and 48 “recombinants.” Five weeks later, even that second article is likely outdated.

 

Dragging on



Numbers

Estimates of the rate of long COVID vary wildly. One pooled analysis said 6.2% of COVID-19 patients still had symptoms at 3 months, using a relatively narrow definition. A modelling study from the World Health Organization similarly estimated 17 million long COVID cases in Europe in 2020-21, about 7.1%. The US government calculated that 7.7-23 million Americans had long COVID in February 2022.

large Scottish study, however, reported that 42% of COVID-19 patients still had symptoms 6-18 months after their bout. And in a smaller study by Spanish researchers who got a particularly high number of invitees to cooperate, 59.7% of hospitalized patients and a shocking 67.5% of outpatients had at least one residual symptom 2 years after their acute infection, primarily pain, fatigue, and cognitive impairment. Similar to a Chinese study finding that 55% were still not completely well after 2 years. One major caveat: most of the patients in all 3 studies were infected with the original Wuhan strain of SARS-CoV-2, before the arrival of vaccines, antivirals, or Omicron.

We’ve hoped Omicron patients would be much less prone to long COVID. But according to official UK government analyses the percentage of people with persistent symptoms 12 weeks after Omicron is only 10-15% lower than after Delta, among people who are triple-vaccinated. The rate was halved, though, among people who’d had only two doses of vaccine. 

Symptoms

The manifestations of long COVID can apparently include both low semen quality and erectile dysfunction. I believe it, partly because so many women have told me they lost their libido when they had COVID-19.

In older people, COVID-19 increases the risk of both dementia and Parkinson’s, with a 69% increase in new diagnoses of Alzheimer’s disease during the year after infection. The Alzheimer article’s co-author Dr. Pamela Davis hypothesizes at a physicians-only website that “persons who already had declining cognitive function were tipped over into frank Alzheimer's disease.” Another reason for us older people to do everything we can to avoid catching COVID-19 (we all have some degree of declining cognitive function). A giant study by the Alzheimer's Association Global Consortium should eventually shed more light. 

Causes

The South African researcher Etheresia Pretorius has published a paper confirming her previous observations of abnormal clotting phenomena in the blood of long COVID patients, in the form of hyperactivated platelets and microclots of fibrin/amyloid. 

I’m a believer, given the evidence of impaired circulation in the lungs, hearts, and brains of long COVID patients. But, with others, I confess to finding it odd that nobody except Dr. Pretorius ever seems to detect those microclots, and slightly suspicious that she’s apparently hypothesized the same underlying mechanism for diseases from diabetes to lupus and Parkinson’s. And I’d like to see better evidence that treatment attacking the clots works than the pilot studyDr. Pretorius reported a year ago. Fortunately that evidence may arrive soon: the British STIMULATE-ICP trial testing other treatments the anticoagulant rivaroxaban (that might dissolve microclots) finally began enrolling patients this summer.

MRI brain scans on 15 post-COVID-19 patients showed mild abnormalities that could have been vascular, though there was little difference between patients with and without fatigue or brain fog. More to the point is a study that using a “susceptibility-weighted” MRI demonstrated post-COVID-19 abnormalities in the frontal lobe and brain stem, brain regions linked with fatigue, insomnia, anxiety, depression, headaches and cognitive problems. The researchers’ press release hinted that some of their subjects had long COVID but unfortunately didn’t compare that subgroup with others. Other post-COVID changes include poor circulation to the heart muscle and fibrotic scarring of the lungs (especially relevant to patients from early in the pandemic).

Prevention



Vaccination may help protect against long COVID when people get breakthrough infections. Studies among general populations have given vaccinees variously a 15% (US), 28% (Scotland), and 50% (UK) advantage over the unvaccinated. The authors of one systematic review concluded that vaccination helps but declined to quantify how much. A preprinted study of 280 chronic rheumatological disease patients, however, has found those who were fully vaccinated to be only one-tenth as likely to have persistent symptoms 3 months after a breakthrough infection. Since no previous study has found such a strong protective effect, it might be specific to patients with autoimmune conditions. But, as always, the best way to avoid getting long COVID is to avoid getting COVID-19 in the first place, so keep up to date with your boosters.

…As I’ve said treatment with Paxlovid seems to cut risk somewhat.

And so may – surprisingly – weight loss. A new British study found that every additional point of Body Mass Index (weight squared in kilograms divided by height in centimeters), increases the risk of long COVID by 2.7%. That means that all other things being equal someone who barely qualifies as obese (BMI = 30), is 22% more likely to develop long COVID than someone in the middle of the normal range (BMI = 22), and someone morbidly obese (BMI = 40), like 11.5% of American women, runs a 50% higher risk.

Treatment

No news. The Washington Post describes desperate long COVID sufferers turning to charlatans who peddle everything from ivermectin to earthworm extract. Unfortunately when it came to hyperbaric oxygen treatment this otherwise excellent article got it wrong. They linked to a year-old pilot study – 10 patients who said they felt better after treatment than before – but ignored the excellent research published this summer that demonstrated marked improvement with HBOT as compared with a sham control treatment.

 

Rachel, Rachel, I’ve been thinking



OK, so Rochelle Walensky, the head of the CDC, has had COVID-19. No scandal there, though as per the photograph above, she hasn’t always been superprudent. And – like Anthony Fauci and Joe Biden – she had a relapse of symptoms and test positivity a few days after finishing a course of Paxlovid. Clearly this phenomenon is much more common than Pfizer admits. BUT: unlike Fauci and Biden, she had no business taking Paxlovid in the first place. They are both far over 65, the cutoff after which Palovid definitely helps avoid hospitalization and death. Walensky is in her 50’s, even younger than Kamala Harris who was given Paxlovid even more scandalously, for an asymptomatic infection, where it is never indicated. If I myself know that Paxlovid does little or nothing for people under 65, even those at high risk because of chronic disease, I’d expect that Walensky to know so as well. And if I know that Paxlovid, while reducing risk of hospitalization, doesn't relieve symptoms, Walensky should be at least as well-informed.

 

Have they no shame?



This unfortunate child was actually not connected with the COVID vaccination campaign in any way, and his death from pneumonia was in no way related to either COVID-19 or COVID-19 vaccines.





Thursday, October 20, 2022

Alphabet Soup

 


Treatment and testing news


Monoclonal antibodies: It was starting to seem as though the monoclonal antibody era was over, with the WHO strongly advising against the use of both casirivimab-imdevimab (Regeneron, which we already knew was no good against Omicron) and sotrovimab (it worked against Omicron BA.1 but not against BA.2 and thus probably not against later subvariants either). But what about Lilly’s latest, bebtelovimab? It does a good job of neutralizing both BA.4/5 and BA.4.6 in the test tube. Yes, its clinical trials in humans were pre-Omicron, but if laboratory evidence is enough to spur a wide rollout of updated vaccine boosters, I’d think it could be enough for Emergency Use Authorization of bebtelovimab in Europe – it already was for the US but the drug is near-unobtainable in practice.

Evusheld: A couple of posts back I wondered why AstraZeneca’s monoclonal antibody combo given by intramuscular injection had been approved only for prevention of COVID-19 in the immunocompromised and not for treatment of high-risk outpatients, given that it was effective in the laboratory against early varieties of Omicron. Well, now the European Medicines Agency is encouraging just that, so outpatients will have another option besides Paxlovid and remdesivir, assuming AstraZeneca can produce the drug fast enough and doctors catch on about prescribing it. Furthermore, recent real-world data from San Diego say it is effective in preventing clinical COVID-19 from Omicron BA.1, but that in the BA.4/5 era it only prevents severe disease. So far Evusheld is still being underused for its preventive indication even in the US. In Italy only 8000 or so doses have been administered and in the UK it is theoretically approved but in practice unavailable to patients.

Molnupiravir: Remember the first anti-COVID-19 pill, the one from Merck? It proved ineffective against Delta, carries various major concerns, and has been entirely eclipsed by Paxlovid. Now a manuscript from the UK claims it substantially shortens the duration of symptoms, from 14.5 to 10.2 days, while doing nothing to prevent hospitalization or death. I frankly don’t believe a word of it, nor apparently do any experts other than Paul Sax. Why? Because the PANORAMIC study was open-label. People randomized to molnupiravir knew they were taking it, and people who were randomized to usual care knew they were in a drug study and weren’t getting the drug. Patients reported their symptoms themselves, guaranteeing such a powerful placebo effect that in my opinion that aspect of this study is useless.

Ivermectin: Can you believe it’s shown up again? This time in the form of a study performed in Brazil, involving the infamous Pierre Kory, published in an obscure medical journal, under a truly amazing title: “Regular Use of Ivermectin as Prophylaxis for COVID-19 Led Up to a 92% Reduction in COVID-19 Mortality Rate in a Dose-Response Manner: Results of a Prospective Observational Study of a Strictly Controlled Population of 88,012 Subjects.” If you believe that one I have a great bridge I’d like to sell you. Other articles by Kory and his coauthorshave been retracted for fake results, and hopefully this one will be too. If you feel like looking closely at its flaws, start here. And – please – don’t miss the conflict of interest disclosures. I couldn’t find them in the article itself but you can view them on Twitter.

Home tests: We’ve always thought COVID-19 tests were lousy at detecting Omicron. A Dutch study now confirms, reporting that home tests miss up to 50% of symptomatic, PCR-proven cases.

 

Vaccine news


Bivalent BA.1 boosters: Moderna’s human neutralizing antibody results for their first bivalent updated booster, the one called mRNA-1273.214, which targets the spike protein of the original BA.1 Omicron variant, have now been properly published. As we already knew from the preprint, it induced somewhat more antibodies against both BA.1 and BA.4/5 – 61% more in both cases – than did Moderna’s original monovalent booster, and did better against all the pre-Omicron variants as well. Please note that this is not the bivalent booster (mRNA-1273.222) being administered now in the US and soon to arrive in Europe. That one targets the spike protein of BA.4/5 directly. Both Moderna and Pfizer promised the first human data would come through in mid-September, but it ain’t happened yet. 

Bivalent BA.4/5 boosters: This one is finally available in Italy, 6 weeks after the US. Anyone who’s over 12 and 4 months after their last vaccine dose or last infection is eligible, though people at risk because of age, pathology, or occupational exposure are prioritized. I am still gritting my teeth and waiting for those damned human neutralizing antibody results on BA.4/5-targeting boosters that were due in mid-September. Promising early results for both Pfizerand Moderna were only in mice! …But now, on October 13th, Pfizer-BioNTech announced that a 30-mcg dose of their bivalent vaccine given to adult human beings yields “a substantial increase in the Omicron BA.4/BA.5 neutralizing antibody response above pre-booster levels.” Substantial increase. That’s it. No specifics. We already knew that a 30-mcg bivalent Pfizer booster with an admixture of BA.1 stimulated neutralizing antibodies at a level of 226, three times as good as the original monovalent booster. Why is Pfizer holding those data so close to its chest?

Kiddies: Data showing the Moderna vaccine produces lots of antibodies in young children but doesn’t give much concrete protection against illness (50.6% in babies and 36.8% in 2-5-year-olds) has now been published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Symptoms: There’s good new evidence that mRNA vaccination, especially with a booster, makes for milder disease in people who get breakthrough COVID-19, especially if the latest shot was less than 5 months earlier.

Quick fade: We have 2 real-life studies coming down on opposite sides of the vaccine duration question. Down side: researchers from South Africa report that vaccine protection against hospitalization due to the BA.4/5 subvariants falls to 19.3% by 9 months after a two-dose initial series. Booster data are more limited because of the time frame, but suggest that the dropoff may be similar: effectiveness fell from an initial 68.8% to 46.8% by just 3-4 months. Remember, we’re talking about protection not against infection but against severe disease, which is commonly considered long-lasting. These data call into question the fantasy of an annual booster. 

Slow fade: Up side: a vast study of more than 10 million North Carolina residents, extending well into the Omicron era, suggests on the contrary that COVID-19 vaccines may last more than a year against severe outcomes. Protection against infection with the SARS-CoV-2 virus fell off drastically over time, reaching 17% for Pfizer and 30% for Moderna by 14 months after the first dose. This corresponds to the plunge in neutralizing antibodies against all Omicron subvariants by 6 months after any dose of the original mRNA vaccines. But efficacy was still 42% and 68% respectively against hospitalization, and  was about 68% against death for both vaccines. Interestingly, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, whose initial efficacy is much lower, retains that efficacy better over time, still reducing deaths by 80% after 14 months. Third doses provided a further boost. I should say that this study had methodological issues that somewhat limit my optimism. 

Natural immunity: A study from Qatar confirms that having been infected by a pre-Omicron SARS-CoV-2 variant gives little protection (35%) against symptomatic BA.4/5 disease. Infection with earlier Omicron variants, though, gives much more (76%).

Supply chain: The US has a limited supply of updated boosters – at least of Moderna. Nonetheless there should be plenty to go around given that in the 7 weeks since the bivalent shots have been available they’ve drawn only 14.8 million customers (tripled in the last month). That’s out of some 105 million Pfizer and 66 million Moderna that are on order. As the Washington Post points out, this could be the last free booster, so get one while you can. People without health insurance will be particularly badly off, likely having to pay out of pocket not only for COVID-19 vaccines but for tests and treatments as well.             

Clotting issues: Rare cases of serious blood clots, Vaccine-Induced Immune Thrombocytopenia and Thrombosis, can follow Johnson & Johnson’s and AstraZeneca’s vaccines. Now a fatal case has been reported in Argentina soon after vaccination with Russia’s Sputnik V product. No surprise, since Sputnik V is similarly a viral vector vaccine, but if cases have been happening in Russia, as is likely, the authorities ain’t lettin’ on.

 

Variant watch


The BA.2.75 Omicron subvariant first detected in India has been randomly nicknamed “Centaurus” by some guy on Twitter who thought the name was cute. The WHO disapproves. It’s very contagious, and already accounts for about 1% of cases in the US. Fortunately, vaccines may be more effective against it than they are against BA.5, which still accounts for 85% of US cases. Even newer strains such as BA.4.6 and BF.7 (the Mongolian one) are already accounting for more than 15% of US cases. But BA.2.75 already has a daughter, BA.2.75.2, that is said to be 5 times better at escaping previous immunity than even BA.5. Now that, as Anthony Fauci has said, is “suspicious” not to say scary. 

Not to speak of BQ.1.1 and especially XBB (lately driving a nasty surge in Singapore), which  have extreme levels of immune evasion and are more able to infect people who are ultravaccinated, even with the bivalent boosters, or have had recent infections.

All the ingredients in this alphabet soup are Omicron subvariants, mostly subsubvariants of BA.5.

Then there’s a brand-new virus, Khosta-2, which has been found in Russian bats and like SARS-CoV-2 is a sarbecovirus. According to researchers at Washington State University it’s capable of infecting human cells and is resistant to all the monoclonal antibodies and vaccines we have. Should we worry?

There are multiple bad aspects of all this. One is is the rapid development of new subvariants which overlap instead of replacing each other, and the other is the failure of BA.5 to fade away the way previous variants did (as per the wastewater tracking in the picture). As evolutionary biologist T. Ryan Gregory points out, the less we do to stop transmission (dropping mask mandates…) the more these phenomena will occur. And the more likely there will be a vicious winter surge, just as masks are falling off faces and vaccine uptake is in the cellar.

 

Ever more CDC blues


The Centers for Disease Control have pulled another fast one. Their latest guidelines, quietly released in late September, have scrapped masking in healthcare facilities, including nursing homes. They do at least make an exception for areas with high levels of community transmission, which currently means 70% of American counties. But individual facilities can opt out if they want… No more testing before hospital admissions or medical procedures either. And, as in the next-to-last version, no more quarantines.

As usual whenever it offers more liberal policies, the CDC is getting pushback, from physicians whose hospitals are experiencing staff shortages due to COVID-19, from prominent pandemic expert Jeremy Faust, and from at least one former Surgeon General.

At least under the Biden Administration there isn’t the blatant political interference with the CDC that there was under the Former Guy, as documented in shocking detail by the third installment from the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis.

 

Boys and girls


new study from St. Louis claims that having a low testosterone level puts men at increased risk of hospitalization for COVID-19. Men using testosterone replacement therapy had no increased risk. This seems bizarre at first glance, given that men are more likely than women to get COVID-19 or to become very sick with it. But in fact, as I have learned only now, similar findings have been reported by researchers in both Italy and Turkey.

 

Leap vs. leak re-re-redux


I thought the final nail in the coffin of the lab leak theory for the origin of the pandemic was hammered in months ago, but it seems another one was still needed. A world expert has described in great detail the ways the actual SARS-CoV-2 virus differs from anything that could have been designed in, and thus leaked from, a virology laboratory. He also emphatically refutes economist Jeffrey Sachs’s accusation of an NIH conspiracy to suppress the laboratory leak theory.

 

The state of the pandemic


President Biden said in a interview on 60 Minutes, “The pandemic is over. If you notice, no one’s wearing masks. Everybody seems to be in pretty good shape.” Directly contradicting what his own COVID-19 response coordinator, Ashish Jha, had said a week earlier. Biden did admit that “We still have a problem with Covid.” Damn right! With COVID-19 killing 400-500 Americans every day, Biden deserves the backlash he's getting from the recently bereaved, the Washington Post editorial board, and scientists from Anthony Fauci to Eric Topol to Paul Sax and onward to Michael Mina, who supposedly said “COVID is not over.” Biden has even received a pointed rebuke from the Chief Medical Officer of the European Medicines Agency. As far as I can tell Leana Wen is the only supposed expert who’s backing him up, though the dropping of mask requirements on New York’s subways suggest other support in high places. And while his foolish words have no direct policy effect, they will surely make it less likely that Congress will allocate the $22 billion needed to keep fighting the pandemic, and even less likely that vulnerable Americans will bother to get the updated boosters they need. 

Many ordinary Americans are of course ecstatic, with nearly half saying they’ve returned to their pre-pandemic life.

What Joe Biden thinks about the end of the pandemic actually means nothing. It’s the World Health Organization’s job, and WHO chief Dr. Tedros Ghebreyesus, was more circumspect in mid-September: “We are not there yet, but the end is in sight.” His reasoning was, “Last week, the number of weekly reported deaths from COVID-19 was the lowest since March 2020.” His perspective is global, not domestic, and surges in Europe can and do coincide with drops elsewhere. It’s wonderful to know that vaccination and immunity from prior infections (antivirals are not contributing) have reduced deaths so dramatically worldwide, but that doesn’t mean we’re out of the woods.

 



Let me point out that we’ve been here before. In Italy COVID-19 cases nearly zeroed out in July of 2020 and 2021, with dreadful surges just months later. Cases nearly tripled here this September-October, reaching an official case count 40 times higher than in July 2021, though the peak may now be passing. I – and other colleagues confirm – am now again hearing every day from friends and patients with COVID-19. Absurdly, 2 weeks into this latest surge Italy went through with removing its last remaining mask mandate, which required KN95 masks on public transport. Now, though, they may reconsider… 

The US was doing pretty well in June 2021 too, with optimists predicting the coming end of the pandemic, but it’s running triple the new cases and twice the deaths it was then. Nobody knows whether another variant is going to hit hard, or whether the current ones will soar again when people go back indoors in the chilly weather.

But even if no winter surge happens, and even if COVID-19 is in fact in the process of going from epidemic from endemic – even if, as some think, COVID-19 is now less lethal than flu – I’m still far from reassured. First, there continue to be plenty of new cases. Second, SARS-Co-V-2 is not like the flu. It’s a uniquely insidious virus, particularly capable of causing long-lasting disability itself and triggering downhill slides in chronic medical conditions from heart failure to dementia. 

 

The latest vaccine mishegos


This one, which came from WND News Services on October 11, is worth quoting in full:

“Pfizer executive Janine Small testifies before the European Parliament in Brussels on Monday”

Undermining the premise for mandates and "passports," a Pfizer executive admitted to the European Parliament on Monday that her company's vaccine was never tested during clinical trials for the ability to prevent transmission of COVID-19. Janine Small, Pfizer's president of international developed markets, was asked by Dutch MEP Rob Roos if the pharmaceutical giant had tested the vaccine “on stopping the transmission of the virus before it entered the market.” 

No ... you know, we had to really move at the speed of science to really understand what is happening in the market," she confessed.

Roos later posted a video on Twitter of Small's response and added his own comment.

"This is scandalous!" he said. "Millions of people worldwide felt forced to get vaccinated because of the myth that you do it for others."

That claim, he said, has “turned out to be a cheap lie.”

This is obviously total bullshit: aside from anything else, if you prevent infection, which the vaccines do, then by definition you prevent transmission. So it occurred to me to google the website where this appears. I was not entirely shocked to read the first paragraph of its Wikipedia entry:

WND (formerly WorldNetDaily) is an American far-right fake news website. It is known for promoting falsehoods and conspiracy theories, including the false claim that former President Barack Obama was not born in the United States.