Plasma-based antigen persistence in the post-acute phase of SARS-CoV-2 infection

Author:

Peluso Michael J.ORCID,Swank Zoe N.,Goldberg Sarah A.,Lu Scott,Dalhuisen Thomas,Borberg Ella,Senussi Yasmeen,Luna Michael A.,Chang Song Celina,Clark Alexus,Zamora Andhy,Lew Megan,Viswanathan Badri,Huang BeatriceORCID,Anglin Khamal,Hoh Rebecca,Hsue Priscila Y.,Durstenfeld Matthew S.ORCID,Spinelli Matthew A.,Glidden David V.,Henrich Timothy J.,Kelly J. Daniel,Deeks Steven G.ORCID,Walt David R.ORCID,Martin Jeffrey N.ORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTBACKGROUNDPersistent symptoms among some persons who develop COVID-19 has led to the hypothesis that SARS-CoV-2 may, in some form or location, persist for long periods following acute infection. Several studies have shown data in this regard but are limited by non-representative and small study populations, short duration since acute infection, and lack of a true-negative comparator group to assess assay specificity.METHODSWe evaluated adults with RNA-confirmed COVID-19 at multiple time points following acute infection (pandemic-era participants) and adults with specimens collected prior to 2020 (pre-pandemic era). Using once-thawed plasma, we employed the Simoa® (Quanterix) single molecule array detection platform to measure SARS-CoV-2 spike, S1, and nucleocapsid antigens.RESULTSCompared to 250 pre-pandemic participants who had 2% assay positivity, detection of any SARS-CoV-2 antigen was significantly more frequent among 171 pandemic-era participants at three different time periods in the post-acute phase of infection. The absolute difference in SARS-CoV-2 plasma antigen prevalence was +11% (95% CI: +5.0% to +16%) at 3.0-6.0 months post-onset of COVID-19; +8.7% (95% CI: +3.1% to +14%) at 6.1 to 10.0 months; and +5.4% (95% CI: +0.42% to +10%) at 10.1-14.1 months. Hospitalization for acute COVID-19 and, among the non-hospitalized, worse self-reported health during acute COVID-19 were associated with greater post-acute phase antigen detection.CONCLUSIONSCompared to uninfected persons, there is an excess prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 antigenemia in SARS-CoV-2-infected individuals up to 14 months after acute COVID-19. These findings motivate an urgent research agenda regarding the short-term and long-term clinical manifestations of this viral persistence.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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