Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2005)

Neutralizing Antibody Response and SARS Severity

  • Mei-Shang Ho,
  • Wei-Ju Chen,
  • Hour-Young Chen,
  • Szu-Fong Lin,
  • Min-Chin Wang,
  • Jiali Di,
  • Yen-Ta Lu,
  • Ching-Lung Liu,
  • Shan-Chwen Chang,
  • Chung-Liang Chao,
  • Chwan-Chuen King,
  • Jeng-Min Chiou,
  • Ih-Jen Su,
  • Jyh-Yuan Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1111.040659
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11
pp. 1730 – 1737

Abstract

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Using the Taiwan nationwide laboratory-confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) database, we analyzed neutralizing antibody in relation to clinical outcomes. With a linear mixed model, neutralizing antibody titer was shown to peak between week 5 and week 8 after onset and to decline thereafter, with a half-life of 6.4 weeks. Patients with a longer illness showed a lower neutralizing antibody response than patients with a shorter illness duration (p = 0.008). When early responders were compared with most patients, who seroconverted on and after week 3 of illness, the small proportion (17.4%) of early responders (antibody detectable within 2 weeks) had a higher death rate (29.6% vs. 7.8%) (Fisher exact test, p = 0.004), had a shorter survival time of 60 years of age (Fisher exact test, p = 0.01). Our findings have implications for understanding the pathogenesis of SARS and for SARS vaccine research and development.

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