Some diseases just won't go away
By UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA - SAN
FRANCISCO
The COVID-19 virus can persist in the blood and tissue of patients
for more than a year after the acute phase of the illness has ended, according
to new research from UC San Francisco that offers potential clues to why some
people develop long COVID.By Lalo Alcaraz
The scientists found pieces of SARS-CoV-2, referred to as COVID antigens, lingering in the
blood up to 14 months after infection and for more than two years in tissue
samples from people who had COVID.
“These two studies provide some of the strongest evidence
so far that COVID antigens can persist in some people, even though we think
they have normal immune responses,” said Michael Peluso, MD, an infectious
disease researcher in the UCSF School of Medicine, who led both studies.
The findings were presented at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI), which was held March 3 to 6, 2024, in Denver.
Evidence of long-term infection
Early in the pandemic, COVID-19 was thought to be a
transient illness. But a growing number of patients, even those who had
previously been healthy, continued having symptoms, such as, brain fog,
digestive problems, and vascular issues, for months or even years.
The researchers looked at blood samples from 171 people
who had been infected with COVID. Using an ultra-sensitive test for the COVID
“spike” protein, which helps the virus break into human cells, the scientists
found the virus was still present up to 14 months later in some people.
Among those who were hospitalized for COVID, the
likelihood of detecting the COVID antigens was about twice as high as it was
for those who were not. It was also higher for those who reported being sicker,
but were not hospitalized.
“As a clinician, these associations convince me that we
are on to something, because it makes sense that someone who had been sicker
with COVID would have more antigen that can stick around,” Peluso said.
Virus persists for up to two years in tissue
Since the virus is believed to persist in the tissue
reservoirs, the scientists turned to UCSF’s Long COVID Tissue Bank, which
contains samples donated by patients with and without long COVID.
They detected portions of viral RNA for up to two years after infection, although
there was no evidence that the person had become reinfected. They found it in
the connective tissue where immune cells are located, suggesting that the viral
fragments were causing the immune system to attack. In some of the samples, the
researchers found that the virus could be active.
Peluso said more research is needed to determine whether
the persistence of these fragments drives long COVID and such associated risks
as heart attack and stroke.
But, based on these findings, Peluso’s team at UCSF is
involved in multiple clinical trials that are testing whether monoclonal
antibodies or antiviral drugs can remove the virus and improve the health of
people with long COVID.
“There is a lot more work to be done, but I feel like we
are making progress in really understanding the long-term consequences of this
infection,” Peluso said.
Meeting: Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic
Infections (CROI)
The studies were supported by funding from the PolyBio
Research Foundation to support UCSF’s Long-Term Impact of Infection with Novel
Coronavirus (LIINC) Clinical Core and a Merck Investigator Studies Program
Grant. The National Institute of Health’s National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases also provided funding (3R01AI1411003-03S1, R01AI158013 and
K23AI134327, K23AI157875 and K24AI145806). Additional support came from the
Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital Department of Medicine and Division
of HIV, Infectious Diseases and Global Medicine.