On sait enfin combien de temps on est immunisé contre le covid

/1276912-on-sait-enfin-combien-de-temps-

  • On sait enfin combien de temps on est immunisé contre le covid - Numerama
    https://www.numerama.com/sciences/1276912-on-sait-enfin-combien-de-temps-on-est-immunise-contre-le-covid.htm

    Combien de temps perdure l’immunité contre le coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, après une infection ? Plus de 3 ans après le début de la pandémie, une méta-analyse de temps long livre de précieuses données, à partir de plusieurs études.

    Après une infection virale, le corps humain développe généralement une immunité : s’il est de nouveau confronté au virus, il saura s’en protéger. Les vaccins s’inspirent de ce système. Le covid n’y échappe pas, mais celui-ci est apparu fin 2019, déclenchant une pandémie début 2020 : en l’absence de recul, la durée de l’immunité est longtemps restée complexe à évaluer.

    Plus de trois ans après, les études au long cours commencent à être publiées, avec davantage d’acuité qu’au début. C’est le cas d’une nouvelle publication, dans The Lancet, datant du 16 février 2023. Elle prend la forme d’une méta-analyse, regroupant 65 études provenant de 19 pays.

    • Past SARS-CoV-2 infection protection against re-infection: a systematic review and meta-analysis - The Lancet
      https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(22)02465-5/abstract


      Figure 3Estimates of protection by time since infection for ancestral, alpha, delta, omicron BA.1, and omicron BA.2 variants

      Summary
      Background
      Understanding the level and characteristics of protection from past SARS-CoV-2 infection against subsequent re-infection, symptomatic COVID-19 disease, and severe disease is essential for predicting future potential disease burden, for designing policies that restrict travel or access to venues where there is a high risk of transmission, and for informing choices about when to receive vaccine doses. We aimed to systematically synthesise studies to estimate protection from past infection by variant, and where data allow, by time since infection.

      Methods
      In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we identified, reviewed, and extracted from the scientific literature retrospective and prospective cohort studies and test-negative case-control studies published from inception up to Sept 31, 2022, that estimated the reduction in risk of COVID-19 among individuals with a past SARS-CoV-2 infection in comparison to those without a previous infection. We meta-analysed the effectiveness of past infection by outcome (infection, symptomatic disease, and severe disease), variant, and time since infection. We ran a Bayesian meta-regression to estimate the pooled estimates of protection. Risk-of-bias assessment was evaluated using the National Institutes of Health quality-assessment tools. The systematic review was PRISMA compliant and was registered with PROSPERO (number CRD42022303850).

      Findings
      We identified a total of 65 studies from 19 different countries. Our meta-analyses showed that protection from past infection and any symptomatic disease was high for ancestral, alpha, beta, and delta variants, but was substantially lower for the omicron BA.1 variant. Pooled effectiveness against re-infection by the omicron BA.1 variant was 45·3% (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 17·3–76·1) and 44·0% (26·5–65·0) against omicron BA.1 symptomatic disease. Mean pooled effectiveness was greater than 78% against severe disease (hospitalisation and death) for all variants, including omicron BA.1. Protection from re-infection from ancestral, alpha, and delta variants declined over time but remained at 78·6% (49·8–93·6) at 40 weeks. Protection against re-infection by the omicron BA.1 variant declined more rapidly and was estimated at 36·1% (24·4–51·3) at 40 weeks. On the other hand, protection against severe disease remained high for all variants, with 90·2% (69·7–97·5) for ancestral, alpha, and delta variants, and 88·9% (84·7–90·9) for omicron BA.1 at 40 weeks.

    • le faux (la grippette-trotinette) deviend(rai)t vrai ? avec une protection (actuellement ?) durable contre les formes graves, le discours rassuriste sur l’immunité acquise a peut-être trouvé une base matérielle. surtout si on imagine que la question qui a du mal a émerger des effets de long terme se résoudre en extrapolant le constat (pas question des post covid ou de covid long dans cet article, semble-t-il).

      c’est le moment d’écrire l’histoire des vainqueurs

      le virus n’existait plus, voire n’avait jamais existé.

      https://seenthis.net/messages/991625

      #covid_19 #immunité