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SARS-CoV-2 intra-host diversity, antibody response, and disease severity after reinfection by the variant of concern Gamma in Brazil.

Felipe Gomes NavecaValdinete Alves NascimentoFernanda NascimentoMaria OgrzewalskaAlex Pauvolid-CorrêaMia Ferreira AraújoIghor ArantesÉrika Rocha BatistaAlessandro Álvares MagalhãesFernando VinhalTirza Peixoto MattosIrina RiedigerMaria do Carmo DeburBeatriz GrinsztejnValdiléa G VelosoPatrícia BrasilRodrigo Ribeiro RodriguesDarcita Buerger RovarisSandra Bianchini FernandesCristiano FernandesJoão Hugo Abdalla SantosLígia Fernandes AbdallaRubens Costa-FilhoMarineide SilvaVictor SouzaÁgatha Araújo CostaMatilde MejíaMaria Júlia BrandãoLuciana Fé GonçalvesGeorge Allan SilvaMichele Silva de JesusKarina PessoaAndré de Lima Guerra CoradoDebora Camila Gomes DuarteAna Beatriz MachadoKetiuce de Azevedo ZukeramNatalia ValenteRenata Serrano LopesElisa Cavalcante PereiraLuciana Reis AppolinarioAlice Sampaio RochaLuis Fernando Lopez TortTsuyoshi SekizukaKentaro ItokawaMasanori HashinoMakoto KurodaFilipe Zimmer DezordiGabriel Luz WallauEdson DelatorreTiago GräfMarilda Mendonça SiqueiraGonzalo BelloPaola Cristina Resende
Published in: Scientific reports (2023)
The rapid spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Variant of Concern (VOC) Gamma in Amazonas during early 2021 fueled a second large COVID-19 epidemic wave and raised concern about the potential role of reinfections. Very few cases of reinfection associated with the VOC Gamma have been reported to date, and their potential impact on clinical, immunological, and virological parameters remains largely unexplored. Here we describe 25 cases of SARS-CoV-2 reinfection in Brazil. SARS-CoV-2 genomic analysis confirmed that individuals were primo-infected with distinct viral lineages between March and December 2020 (B.1.1, B.1.1.28, B.1.1.33, B.1.195, and P.2) and reinfected with the VOC Gamma between 3 to 12 months after primo-infection. We found a similar mean cycle threshold (Ct) value and limited intra-host viral diversity in both primo-infection and reinfection samples. Sera of 14 patients tested 10-75 days after reinfection displayed detectable neutralizing antibodies (NAb) titers against SARS-CoV-2 variants that circulated before (B.1.*), during (Gamma), and after (Delta and Omicron) the second epidemic wave in Brazil. All individuals had milder or no symptoms after reinfection, and none required hospitalization. These findings demonstrate that individuals reinfected with the VOC Gamma may display relatively high RNA viral loads at the upper respiratory tract after reinfection, thus contributing to onward viral transmissions. Despite this, our study points to a low overall risk of severe Gamma reinfections, supporting that the abrupt increase in hospital admissions and deaths observed in Amazonas and other Brazilian states during the Gamma wave was mostly driven by primary infections. Our findings also indicate that most individuals analyzed developed a high anti-SARS-CoV-2 NAb response after reinfection that may provide some protection against reinfection or disease by different SARS-CoV-2 variants.
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