British study shows evidence of waning immunity to coronavirus

A study of hundreds of thousands of people across England suggests immunity to the coronavirus is gradually wearing off.

Iran Press/ Europe: Researchers who sent out home finger-prick tests to more than 365,000 randomly selected people in England found a more than 26% decline in COVID-19 antibodies over just three months.

"We observe a significant decline in the proportion of the population with detectable antibodies over three rounds of national surveillance, using a self-administered lateral flow test, 12, 18 and 24 weeks after the first peak of infections in England," the team wrote in a pre-print version of their report, released before peer review.

"This is consistent with evidence that immunity to seasonal coronaviruses declines over 6 to 12 months after infection and emerging data on SARS-CoV-2 that also detected a decrease over time in antibody levels in individuals followed in longitudinal studies.”

The study was published Monday by Imperial College London and Ipsos MORI, a market research company. At the beginning of the study, in June, 6% of those who took the tests had IgG antibody responses to the coronavirus, they reported. By September, just 4.4% of them did. For health care workers, the rates stayed about the same.

The global tally of coronavirus cases stands at 43,777,188. While 32,182,181 have recovered,1,164,516  have died so far. The US, the worst-hit country, has 8,962,783 cases. It is followed by India, which has 7,946,429 cases, Brazil (5,411,550 ).

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