SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2021 COVID-19 infection after vaccine may confer ‘super immunity,’ study indicates By FEDOR ZARKHIN The Oregonian People who get COVID-19 despite being vaccinated against the disease could develop “super immunity” against future coronavirus infections, Oregon Health & Science University researchers have found. “This is unusually high, unusually effective,” lead re- searcher Dr. Fikadu Tafesse said of his findings, pub- lished Thursday, Dec. 16 in the Journal of the American Medical Association. “You get an extremely, extremely high level of protection.” Tafesse’s work comes nearly two years into the pandemic and as health officials and world leaders scramble to react to the lat- est variant of the virus, the rapidly spreading omicron. The new variant was not included in Tafesse’s study but he said he is confident the findings would apply to it, as well. After the delta variant and low vaccination rates quashed dreams of an end to the pandemic this summer, health officials and the public have been fearful of successive waves of coronavirus variants. More troubling now, early research indicates omicron can effectively evade even vaccinated people’s immune systems and that it spreads more rapidly than the delta variant. For one of Tafesse’s col- leagues on the project, the OHSU research indicates a potential “end game” for the pandemic. “It points to where we’re likely to land,” Dr. Marcel Curlin, associate professor of medicine and a co-author of BAKER CITY HERALD — A5 LOCAL & STATE the study, said in a state- ment. “Once you’re vacci- nated and then exposed to the virus, you’re probably going to be reasonably well protected from future vari- ants.” Still, it’s unclear what concrete, practical implica- tions the study provides, whether for the 2.7 million Oregonians and counting who are fully vaccinated or the 48,000 among them who got infected anyway. To get his results, Tafesse, an assistant professor of molecular microbiology and immunology at the school of medicine, compared the im- mune system responses in blood samples collected from 52 fully vaccinated OHSU employees, 26 of whom had a breakthrough infection. Tafesse’s lab exposed samples of the participants’ blood to live samples of five variants of the coronavirus — including delta — and measured the volume and effectiveness of the antibod- ies the blood generated in response. They found a consistent pattern: The antibodies in the blood from those who had a breakthrough infection were as much as 1,000% more effective than the antibodies generated by those who had only been vaccinated. Antibodies are one of the immune system’s key lines of defense against infection. The first viral infection — or vaccine dose — teaches the immune system what the virus looks like. When there is another exposure or infec- tion, antibodies tailor-made for that specific virus seek out, bind to and neutralize the virus. “Our study suggests that individuals who are vac- cinated and then exposed to a breakthrough infec- tion have super immunity,” Tafesse said. Not only were there more antibodies in the blood of those with infections, but those antibodies were more versatile. They effectively recognized different vari- ants as versions of the same, fundamental virus, and acted accordingly. The reaction and pattern were so strong, Tafesse said he is confident antibodies would recognize omicron and produce a similarly robust response. A key question Tafesse is now trying to answer is whether booster shots provide as much protection as breakthrough infec- tions. He said he hopes to release the results of his ongoing research into that question by mid-January. Pfizer-BioNTech said last week blood from people with three doses of their vaccine produced 25 times more antibodies when exposed to the omicron variant than blood from people who got only two doses. It’s a “very, very im- portant” question, Tafesse said, because he would like to be able to advise the public to get booster shots. Even though he expects the two to be comparable, there’s a possibility break- through infections offer more protection. Vaccines target only specific portions of the virus, meaning that if those por- tions mutate, an inoculated immune system might not recognize the mutated vari- ant as the coronavirus. DISEASE Continued from A1 But because there is no special hunting season for whitetails — they are legal quarry during seasons, the same as mule deer — Ratliff said the dieoff won’t lead to a reduction in hunting tags in the Sumpter unit, which includes Baker Valley. An outbreak of EHD killed an estimated 2,000 white-tailed deer in Uma- tilla County during the fall of 2019, resulting in the cancel- lation of some deer hunts in that area. The virus poses no threat to people, cats or dogs. Nor can people become ill by eat- ing the meat of a deer or other animal infected with EHD. Deer are infected only by being bitten by midges; deer can’t infect each other through nose-to-nose contact, as with some other diseases. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife/Contributed Photo A white-tailed deer. contributed to the severity of this year’s EHD outbreak. Deer tend to be most vul- nerable to being infected by midges when the animals are concentrated around water sources, the biologists said. And with fewer of those sources during this dry sum- mer, there were likely larger numbers of deer gathering in places where they were exposed to midges, Perrine Union County EHD also spread through said. It’s not clear yet whether white-tailed deer in Union the EHD outbreak will County this summer, in- prompt ODFW to reduce cluding in higher elevation forested areas in the Wenaha hunting tag numbers for any and Sled Springs units where 2022 seasons, Perrine said. He said he hopes that’s not the disease has rarely been the case, particularly with a confirmed in the past, said popular muzzleloader hunt Phillip Perrine, a wildlife bi- ologist at ODFW’s La Grande for whitetails. Ratliff said the EHD office. outbreak ended quickly once “It was more prevalent than we’ve seen,” Perrine said. freezing temperatures killed the year’s crop of midges. He didn’t have an esti- Both he and Perrine mate for how many deer said they stopped receiving died, although he said there reports of dead deer in early were outbreaks in both the mountains and in the Grande fall. “Once the conditions get Ronde Valley. Assessing the extent of the colder and these midges are no longer on the landscape, outbreak will be easier once we didn’t really have any ODFW receives hunter re- ports and conducts its annual more losses,” Perrine said. aerial deer census this month, Perrine said. Wallowa County He said ODFW started A total of 12 deer — 11 getting reports of dead white- whitetails and one mule deer tailed deer in early summer, — were confirmed by tests as and, as in Baker Valley, tissue having died from EHD, said samples confirmed EHD. Bree Furfey, district wildlife Both Perrine and Ratliff biologist at ODFW’s Enter- believe the severe drought prise office. The disease is also sus- pected as the cause in another mule deer’s death. Furfey said she doesn’t have an estimated total number of deer deaths due to the outbreak. She said the virus was most prevalent in and around the city of Wallowa, but it was also confirmed elsewhere in the Wallowa Valley including near Joseph, Lostine and En- terprise, and in the northern part of the county near Troy and the Wenaha country. Furfey said that although the extent of the EHD outbreak isn’t certain, she doesn’t believe the death toll among deer was high enough to warrant any reductions in hunting tags for 2022. Rapid recovery? Although white-tailed deer are much more susceptible to EHD, the species has an advantage in that whitetail populations tend to grow faster than mule deer herds when conditions are suitable, Perrine said. White-tailed does typically have twin fawns each year, he said. “It’s difficult to overhunt whitetails because they repro- duce so quickly,” Perrine said. Furfey and Ratliff also cited the procreation potential of whitetails as one reason why this year’s EHD outbreak likely won’t affect next year’s hunting season. The Grove Team Presents Free Christmas Movies Monday & tuesday, december 20th & 21st 11:00 & 1:20 11:10 & 1:40 11:05 & 1:30 Seating is limited to half capaciity. Get your free tickets at the Eltrym in advance! Tickets must be picked up in person Limit 5 tickets per person