PLoS Pathogens (Jun 2022)

Longitudinal kinetics of RBD+ antibodies in COVID-19 recovered patients over 14 months.

  • Tsuf Eyran,
  • Anna Vaisman-Mentesh,
  • David Taussig,
  • Yael Dror,
  • Ligal Aizik,
  • Aya Kigel,
  • Shai Rosenstein,
  • Yael Bahar,
  • Dor Ini,
  • Ran Tur-Kaspa,
  • Tatyana Kournos,
  • Dana Marcoviciu,
  • Dror Dicker,
  • Yariv Wine

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010569
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 6
p. e1010569

Abstract

Read online

We describe the longitudinal kinetics of the serological response in COVID-19 recovered patients over a period of 14 months. The antibody kinetics in a cohort of 192 recovered patients, including 66 patients for whom follow-up serum samples were obtained at two to four clinic visits, revealed that RBD-specific antibodies decayed over the 14 months following the onset of symptoms. The decay rate was associated with the robustness of the response in that antibody levels that were initially highly elevated after the onset of symptoms subsequently decayed more rapidly. An exploration of the differences in the longitudinal kinetics between recovered patients and naïve vaccinees who had received two doses of the BNT162b2 vaccine showed a significantly faster decay in the naïve vaccinees, indicating that serological memory following natural infection is more robust than that following to vaccination. Our data highlighting the differences between serological memory induced by natural infection vs. vaccination contributed to the decision-making process in Israel regarding the necessity for a third vaccination dose.