International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Jun 2023)

Susceptibility to reinfection with SARS-CoV-2 virus relative to existing antibody concentrations and T cell response

  • Shereen Atef,
  • Farida Al Hosani,
  • Laila AbdelWareth,
  • Rami H. Al-Rifai,
  • Rowan Abuyadek,
  • Andrea Jabari,
  • Raghib Ali,
  • Basel Altrabulsi,
  • Susanna Dunachie,
  • Adnan Alatoom,
  • James G Donnelly

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 131
pp. 100 – 110

Abstract

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Objectives: We investigated the reinfection rate of vaccinated or convalescent immunized SARS-CoV-2 in 952 expatriate workers with SARS-CoV-2 serological antibody (Ab) patterns and surrogate T cell memory at recruitment and follow-up. Methods: Trimeric spike, nucleocapsid, and neutralizing Abs were measured, along with a T cell stimulation assay, targeting SARS-CoV-2 memory in clusters of differentiation (CD) 4+ and CD8+ T cells. The subjects were then followed up for reinfection for up to 6 months. Results: The seroprevalence positivity at enrollment was greater than 99%. The T cell reactivity in this population was 38.2%. Of the 149 (15.9%) participants that were reinfected during the follow-up period (74.3%) had nonreactive T cells at enrollment. Those who had greater than 100 binding Ab units/ml increase from the median concentration of antispike immunoglobulin G Abs had a 6% reduction in the risk of infection. Those who were below the median concentration had a 78% greater risk of infection. Conclusion: Significant immune protection from reinfection was observed in those who retained T cell activation memory. Additional protection was observed when the antispike was greater than the median value.

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