The Japan Times - UK researchers cure man who had Covid for 411 days

EUR -
AED 4.246655
AFN 73.370436
ALL 95.85756
AMD 436.183723
ANG 2.069944
AOA 1060.363353
ARS 1591.997113
AUD 1.665235
AWG 2.084013
AZN 1.966403
BAM 1.949821
BBD 2.330235
BDT 141.986474
BGN 1.976541
BHD 0.436604
BIF 3434.327888
BMD 1.156339
BND 1.479029
BOB 7.994866
BRL 6.05679
BSD 1.156943
BTN 108.829124
BWP 15.767403
BYN 3.429104
BYR 22664.251381
BZD 2.327115
CAD 1.597489
CDF 2636.453561
CHF 0.915202
CLF 0.02686
CLP 1060.582781
CNY 7.980477
CNH 7.983586
COP 4280.13231
CRC 537.971372
CUC 1.156339
CUP 30.642993
CVE 110.574938
CZK 24.465772
DJF 205.504507
DKK 7.47252
DOP 69.814005
DZD 153.473986
EGP 60.744358
ERN 17.34509
ETB 181.886277
FJD 2.576551
FKP 0.864047
GBP 0.865283
GEL 3.116362
GGP 0.864047
GHS 12.661969
GIP 0.864047
GMD 84.988596
GNF 10152.659388
GTQ 8.855078
GYD 242.07657
HKD 9.041244
HNL 30.66647
HRK 7.536674
HTG 151.720034
HUF 387.345955
IDR 19705.641505
ILS 3.602979
IMP 0.864047
INR 109.375885
IQD 1514.804557
IRR 1518447.025122
ISK 143.189913
JEP 0.864047
JMD 182.245914
JOD 0.819814
JPY 184.257476
KES 150.034967
KGS 101.120955
KHR 4640.390011
KMF 493.756627
KPW 1040.72201
KRW 1739.191954
KWD 0.354522
KYD 0.964189
KZT 558.249982
LAK 24959.585362
LBP 103550.188888
LKR 363.877402
LRD 212.361533
LSL 19.588134
LTL 3.414369
LVL 0.699458
LYD 7.371702
MAD 10.785752
MDL 20.230929
MGA 4821.934928
MKD 61.639763
MMK 2428.506437
MNT 4127.516433
MOP 9.317536
MRU 46.404003
MUR 53.7238
MVR 17.865244
MWK 2008.561579
MXN 20.556765
MYR 4.584305
MZN 73.885704
NAD 19.577233
NGN 1602.061835
NIO 42.460666
NOK 11.201245
NPR 174.129602
NZD 1.99154
OMR 0.444574
PAB 1.157007
PEN 4.001516
PGK 4.983245
PHP 69.387276
PKR 322.676366
PLN 4.275582
PYG 7527.982307
QAR 4.213741
RON 5.094947
RSD 117.421631
RUB 93.661073
RWF 1688.25546
SAR 4.338214
SBD 9.299324
SCR 15.841485
SDG 694.960276
SEK 10.814438
SGD 1.481311
SHP 0.867554
SLE 28.387799
SLL 24247.870647
SOS 660.270118
SRD 43.178292
STD 23933.890033
STN 24.745662
SVC 10.124088
SYP 128.293837
SZL 19.516839
THB 37.892986
TJS 11.078991
TMT 4.047188
TND 3.396748
TOP 2.784187
TRY 51.294885
TTD 7.867183
TWD 36.946082
TZS 2971.860396
UAH 50.797502
UGX 4280.984429
USD 1.156339
UYU 46.837397
UZS 14107.339876
VES 534.333269
VND 30469.542036
VUV 138.191887
WST 3.16629
XAF 653.980002
XAG 0.016298
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.125065
XCG 2.085287
XDR 0.812319
XOF 651.594744
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.960467
ZAR 19.642349
ZMK 10408.441873
ZMW 21.665598
ZWL 372.340801
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RIO

    0.7700

    87.54

    +0.88%

  • RYCEF

    0.3700

    16.06

    +2.3%

  • GSK

    1.7500

    54.7

    +3.2%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    32.47

    +0.03%

  • AZN

    1.3600

    187.14

    +0.73%

  • NGG

    1.9600

    84.29

    +2.33%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.91

    +0.17%

  • BP

    0.6200

    45.41

    +1.37%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    14.72

    +0.41%

  • BTI

    0.6900

    58.45

    +1.18%

  • BCC

    1.0800

    74.65

    +1.45%

  • BCE

    -0.3400

    25.49

    -1.33%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.68

    +0.22%

  • JRI

    0.2400

    12.1

    +1.98%

UK researchers cure man who had Covid for 411 days
UK researchers cure man who had Covid for 411 days / Photo: JUSTIN TALLIS - AFP/File

UK researchers cure man who had Covid for 411 days

British researchers announced Friday they have cured a man who was continually infected with Covid for 411 days by analysing the genetic code of his particular virus to find the right treatment.

Text size:

Persistent Covid infection -- which is different to long Covid or repeated bouts of the disease -- occurs in a small number of patients with already weakened immune systems.

These patients can test positive for months or even years with the infection "rumbling along the whole time", said Luke Snell, a physician specialising in infectious diseases at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust.

The infections can pose a serious threat because around half of patients also have persistent symptoms such as lung inflammation, Snell told AFP, adding that much remains unknown about the condition.

In a new study published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, a team of researchers at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London describe how a 59-year-old man finally overcame his infection after more than 13 months.

The man, who has a weakened immune system due to a kidney transplant, caught Covid in December 2020 and continued to test positive until January this year.

To discover whether he had contracted Covid numerous times or if it was one persistent infection, the researchers used a rapid genetic analysis with nanopore sequencing technology.

The test, which can deliver results in as little as 24 hours, showed the man had an early B.1 variant which was dominant in late 2020 but has since been replaced by newer strains.

Because he had this early variant, the researchers gave him a combination of the casirivimab and imdevimab monoclonal antibodies from Regeneron.

Like most other antibody treatments, the treatment is no longer widely used because it is ineffective against newer variants such as Omicron.

But it successfully cured the man because he was battling a variant from an earlier phase of the pandemic.

- Resistant to treatment -

"The very new variants that are increasing in prevalence now are resistant to all the antibodies available in the UK, the EU and now even the US," Snell said.

The researchers used several such treatments to try to save a seriously ill 60-year-old man in August this year who had been infected since April.

However none worked.

"We really thought he was going to die," Snell said.

So the team crushed up two antiviral treatments not previously used together -- Paxlovid and remdesivir -- and administered them to the unconscious patient via a nasal tube, according to a non-peer-reviewed preprint study on the website ResearchSquare.

"Miraculously he cleared and perhaps this is now the avenue for how we treat these very difficult persistent infections," Snell said, emphasising that this treatment may not translate for normal Covid cases.

At the ECCMID conference in April, the team announced the longest-known persistent infection in a man who tested positive for 505 days before his death.

That "very sad case" came earlier in the pandemic, Snell said, adding that he was grateful there were now so many more treatment options available.

M.Yamazaki--JT