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Many patients with weak immune systems don’t realize COVID-19 meds aren’t as effective anymore

Editorial Team by Editorial Team
November 16, 2022
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Many patients with weak immune systems don’t realize COVID-19 meds aren’t as effective anymore
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Judy Salins considers herself a smart, empowered patient, but until this week, she had no idea that the medicine she takes to defend herself against COVID-19 isn’t protecting her as well as it used to.”I was shocked to hear this,” Salins said. “What do I do now?”Related video above: Physicians share methods to control impacts of ‘tripledemic’The medicine is called Evusheld, and its effectiveness is waning dramatically because new COVID-19 subvariants are taking center stage, and the drug doesn’t neutralize all of them.As of the week ending Nov. 5, more than half of new COVID-19 infections were caused by subvariants that Evusheld does not neutralize.Government health officials have acknowledged for more than a month that Evusheld is less protective, but Salins said she hadn’t heard the news.”I think this is absolutely shameful,” said Salins, a retired high school teacher. “For immune-compromised people like me, getting COVID-19 can be a death sentence, so I’m appalled that no one told me.”Evusheld is the only medicine standing between Salins and the virus. Blood tests showed her vaccinations failed to create antibodies, which is not an uncommon problem for people with poorly functioning immune systems.About 7 million Americans are immune-compromised and could benefit from Evusheld, which helps prevent COVID-19 infection.Advocates for this group say the government hasn’t done nearly enough to get the word out, and many vulnerable people are unaware that the medicine’s power is waning in the face of the new variants. As Evusheld loses its power, patients who take it may need to consider extra steps to protect themselves, such as avoiding crowds or regularly wearing masks.”I’m worried that there is a significant group of people who are unaware of how things have changed. I’m very concerned about that,” said Dr. Brian Koffman, chief medical officer of the CLL Society, which serves people with chronic lymphacytic leukemia.”The tide is coming, and we need to let people know they’re no longer as protected as they used to be,” he said.Koffman is so worried that he predicts immune-compromised people could suffer a “winter of discontent” because of COVID-19.Another advocate for the immune-compromised says health officials “aren’t taking seriously their responsibility as public health officials to communicate to the immune-compromised.””This is a perfect storm — the holidays are upon us and people will travel and want to be together and they won’t realize that they’re not protected by their Evusheld,” said Janet Handal, president and co-founder of the Transplant Recipients and Immunocompromised Patient Advocacy Group.She pointed in particular to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control’s website, which briefly mentions on its website that Evusheld has become less protective.A spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said among other measures, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration shared information about Evusheld’s diminishing efficacy with “more than 350 organizations representing healthcare professionals, patient advocates, pharmacies, and key contacts in the fight against COVID-19” and also posted the information on its Twitter and Facebook feeds.Over the past few weeks at public events, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky and Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, have briefly mentioned that new variants have diminished Evusheld’s efficacy.’We should do better’But Salins said she doesn’t keep her eyes glued to the FDA’s social media feeds, nor does she watch White House briefings. She says her family doctor, who prescribed Evusheld, hasn’t gotten back in touch to explain that it’s not working as well as it used to, and she hasn’t heard anything from her rheumatologist, either.Salins lives in Missouri, where, like in the rest of the country, the new variants that Evusheld fails to neutralize are rapidly taking over. Those variants are growing especially quickly in New York and New Jersey, according to CDC data.CNN reached out to 10 large hospital systems, five in New York and five in New Jersey. Of those, only one said it’s reaching out proactively to their patients who received Evusheld to let them know their medicine isn’t working as well.Northwell Health said it is contacting patients both in writing and by phone “to make patients aware of the waning efficacy of Evusheld,” according to a Northwell spokesperson. The health care system is also telling patients that “while the treatment may offer less protection at this time — it is still better than having no protection at all” — a message echoed by the FDA.Salins, 70, said she’s lucky she attends church with Robyn Brumble, the director of scientific affairs and research at the CLL Society. Brumble, who has written about Evusheld’s waning efficacy, is the one who warned Salins.Now that Salins is aware her medicine isn’t working as well as it used to, she can take steps to be more careful. She might cancel an upcoming flight to Mexico with her husband. She might not attend her grandsons’ indoor sporting events or go to church, or if she does, she’ll be sure to wear an N95 mask.Salins worries about other immune-compromised people who aren’t so fortunate to have a friend who’s an expert.”There’s a lot of people in the US like me who are immune-compromised and they’ve let us be going around and flitting about and not know” about Evusheld’s waning effectiveness, she said.Dr. S. Shahzad Mustafa, an allergist and clinical immunologist at the University of Rochester Medical College, said the entire health care system should have done a better job informing immune-compromised patients that many of the new variants evade Evusheld.”It’s a disservice,” Mustafa said. “We should do better.”Mustafa is a paid consultant on Evusheld to AstraZeneca, the company that makes the drug.An AstraZeneca spokesperson said the company is “developing next generation” monoclonal antibodies “to neutralise currently circulating and potential future variants of concern.” ‘My alarm bells would not go off’Government officials have not been silent about Evusheld’s waning power.According to an HHS spokesperson, the FDA issued its first warning on Oct. 3 and shared it with various medical and patient advocacy groups. The Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, a part of HHS, has shared that information in its weekly engagements with health care providers, medical organizations and advocates for the immune-compromised community. Also, the Office of Intergovernmental and External Affairs at HHS has shared the Evusheld information with state and local organizations, medical providers and advocacy groups.The CDC has posted information for health care providers and for patients about Evusheld and the new variants on its website. At a U.S. Chamber of Commerce event Nov. 1, Walensky, the agency director, mentioned that some new Covid subvariants “do evade our monoclonal antibodies,” including Evusheld.At a White House briefing on Oct. 25, Jha, the White House COVID coordinator, said “with some of the new subvariants that are emerging, some of the main tools we’ve had to protect the immunocompromised, like Evusheld, may not work moving forward. And that’s a huge challenge.”But Handal, who co-founded the immune-compromised support group, said that’s not nearly enough.She pointed to the wording on the CDC page for patients: “Evusheld remains protective, but may offer less protection against certain strains of the Omicron variant.””If I read this, my alarm bells would not go off. This is not something that a patient is going to read and say ‘I’ve got to change my Christmas plans,’ ” she said. “The CDC needs to explain in layman’s terms what has changed and what that means for them, and that I don’t see.”Handal, a technology specialist who worked at the White House during the Clinton administration, criticized the CDC’s page for health care providers as being indirect and overly complicated.That page tells providers that “Evusheld could have decreased efficacy against the Omicron BA.4.6, BF.7, and BA.2.75 sublineages with substitutions at spike protein 346.””Regular doctors aren’t going to understand the spike and the blah, blah, blah,” she said.Handal offered an alternative plan. Since many people are immune-compromised because of the medicines they take, and pharmacists and health insurers are aware of their patients’ prescriptions, the government should ask those groups to let people know that Evusheld is not as powerful as it once was.Medicare, the federal health program, has a large number of patients who are immune-compromised. A spokesperson for the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services did not respond to a request from CNN for comment about Evusheld.A depressing messageIt gets even worse for the immune-compromised.If their Evusheld fails to protect them and they do contract COVID-19, many of them can’t take the antiviral drug Paxlovid, because other drugs they may take interact with it.There is another COVID-19 treatment — a monoclonal antibody called bebtelovimab — but it isn’t expected to neutralize the BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 variants, according to the FDA. Those two variants represented 35% of the new infections in the U.S. in the week ending Nov. 5, according to the CDC.And new treatments aren’t coming anytime soon.”Even if we got money today, it would take us many months to bring a monoclonal into the marketplace, and we don’t have the money today anyway,” Jha told CNN last month.That leaves Koffman, the medical director of the CLL Society, trying to get the word out to immune-compromised people that they need to “go back to basics” and “mask up” because “no variant of concern can outsmart an N95 mask.”It’s not easy to hear this message, he said.When Evusheld became available at the end of last year, it was a huge relief to many immune-compromised people. Finally, they felt safe to leave the house after two years in lockdown and visit with family and friends.”It was a little bit of a get out of jail free card for the immune-compromised community,” Koffman said.But now, when immune-compromised people learn that medicines that once worked so well for them are less effective, they’re “crestfallen,” he said.So, while he worries about the physical health of immune-compromised people who don’t know they need to be more careful, he also worries about the mental health of people who do realize they may need to change their lives — to travel less, for example, or perhaps avoid indoor holiday gatherings.”They get depressed because they’ve lost their ability to do stuff,” he said. “So now I’m worried about both groups.”

Judy Salins considers herself a smart, empowered patient, but until this week, she had no idea that the medicine she takes to defend herself against COVID-19 isn’t protecting her as well as it used to.

“I was shocked to hear this,” Salins said. “What do I do now?”

Related video above: Physicians share methods to control impacts of ‘tripledemic’

The medicine is called Evusheld, and its effectiveness is waning dramatically because new COVID-19 subvariants are taking center stage, and the drug doesn’t neutralize all of them.

As of the week ending Nov. 5, more than half of new COVID-19 infections were caused by subvariants that Evusheld does not neutralize.

Government health officials have acknowledged for more than a month that Evusheld is less protective, but Salins said she hadn’t heard the news.

“I think this is absolutely shameful,” said Salins, a retired high school teacher. “For immune-compromised people like me, getting COVID-19 can be a death sentence, so I’m appalled that no one told me.”

Evusheld is the only medicine standing between Salins and the virus. Blood tests showed her vaccinations failed to create antibodies, which is not an uncommon problem for people with poorly functioning immune systems.

About 7 million Americans are immune-compromised and could benefit from Evusheld, which helps prevent COVID-19 infection.

Advocates for this group say the government hasn’t done nearly enough to get the word out, and many vulnerable people are unaware that the medicine’s power is waning in the face of the new variants. As Evusheld loses its power, patients who take it may need to consider extra steps to protect themselves, such as avoiding crowds or regularly wearing masks.

“I’m worried that there is a significant group of people who are unaware of how things have changed. I’m very concerned about that,” said Dr. Brian Koffman, chief medical officer of the CLL Society, which serves people with chronic lymphacytic leukemia.

“The tide is coming, and we need to let people know they’re no longer as protected as they used to be,” he said.

Koffman is so worried that he predicts immune-compromised people could suffer a “winter of discontent” because of COVID-19.

Another advocate for the immune-compromised says health officials “aren’t taking seriously their responsibility as public health officials to communicate to the immune-compromised.”

“This is a perfect storm — the holidays are upon us and people will travel and want to be together and they won’t realize that they’re not protected by their Evusheld,” said Janet Handal, president and co-founder of the Transplant Recipients and Immunocompromised Patient Advocacy Group.

She pointed in particular to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control’s website, which briefly mentions on its website that Evusheld has become less protective.

A spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said among other measures, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration shared information about Evusheld’s diminishing efficacy with “more than 350 organizations representing healthcare professionals, patient advocates, pharmacies, and key contacts in the fight against COVID-19” and also posted the information on its Twitter and Facebook feeds.

Over the past few weeks at public events, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky and Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, have briefly mentioned that new variants have diminished Evusheld’s efficacy.

‘We should do better’

But Salins said she doesn’t keep her eyes glued to the FDA’s social media feeds, nor does she watch White House briefings. She says her family doctor, who prescribed Evusheld, hasn’t gotten back in touch to explain that it’s not working as well as it used to, and she hasn’t heard anything from her rheumatologist, either.

Salins lives in Missouri, where, like in the rest of the country, the new variants that Evusheld fails to neutralize are rapidly taking over. Those variants are growing especially quickly in New York and New Jersey, according to CDC data.

CNN reached out to 10 large hospital systems, five in New York and five in New Jersey. Of those, only one said it’s reaching out proactively to their patients who received Evusheld to let them know their medicine isn’t working as well.

Northwell Health said it is contacting patients both in writing and by phone “to make patients aware of the waning efficacy of Evusheld,” according to a Northwell spokesperson. The health care system is also telling patients that “while the treatment may offer less protection at this time — it is still better than having no protection at all” — a message echoed by the FDA.

Salins, 70, said she’s lucky she attends church with Robyn Brumble, the director of scientific affairs and research at the CLL Society. Brumble, who has written about Evusheld’s waning efficacy, is the one who warned Salins.

Now that Salins is aware her medicine isn’t working as well as it used to, she can take steps to be more careful. She might cancel an upcoming flight to Mexico with her husband. She might not attend her grandsons’ indoor sporting events or go to church, or if she does, she’ll be sure to wear an N95 mask.

Salins worries about other immune-compromised people who aren’t so fortunate to have a friend who’s an expert.

“There’s a lot of people in the US like me who are immune-compromised and they’ve let us be going around and flitting about and not know” about Evusheld’s waning effectiveness, she said.

Dr. S. Shahzad Mustafa, an allergist and clinical immunologist at the University of Rochester Medical College, said the entire health care system should have done a better job informing immune-compromised patients that many of the new variants evade Evusheld.

“It’s a disservice,” Mustafa said. “We should do better.”

Mustafa is a paid consultant on Evusheld to AstraZeneca, the company that makes the drug.

An AstraZeneca spokesperson said the company is “developing next generation” monoclonal antibodies “to neutralise currently circulating and potential future variants of concern.”

‘My alarm bells would not go off’

Government officials have not been silent about Evusheld’s waning power.

According to an HHS spokesperson, the FDA issued its first warning on Oct. 3 and shared it with various medical and patient advocacy groups. The Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, a part of HHS, has shared that information in its weekly engagements with health care providers, medical organizations and advocates for the immune-compromised community. Also, the Office of Intergovernmental and External Affairs at HHS has shared the Evusheld information with state and local organizations, medical providers and advocacy groups.

The CDC has posted information for health care providers and for patients about Evusheld and the new variants on its website. At a U.S. Chamber of Commerce event Nov. 1, Walensky, the agency director, mentioned that some new Covid subvariants “do evade our monoclonal antibodies,” including Evusheld.

At a White House briefing on Oct. 25, Jha, the White House COVID coordinator, said “with some of the new subvariants that are emerging, some of the main tools we’ve had to protect the immunocompromised, like Evusheld, may not work moving forward. And that’s a huge challenge.”

But Handal, who co-founded the immune-compromised support group, said that’s not nearly enough.

She pointed to the wording on the CDC page for patients: “Evusheld remains protective, but may offer less protection against certain strains of the Omicron variant.”

“If I read this, my alarm bells would not go off. This is not something that a patient is going to read and say ‘I’ve got to change my Christmas plans,’ ” she said. “The CDC needs to explain in layman’s terms what has changed and what that means for them, and that I don’t see.”

Handal, a technology specialist who worked at the White House during the Clinton administration, criticized the CDC’s page for health care providers as being indirect and overly complicated.

That page tells providers that “Evusheld could have decreased efficacy against the Omicron BA.4.6, BF.7, and BA.2.75 sublineages with substitutions at spike protein 346.”

“Regular doctors aren’t going to understand the spike and the blah, blah, blah,” she said.

Handal offered an alternative plan. Since many people are immune-compromised because of the medicines they take, and pharmacists and health insurers are aware of their patients’ prescriptions, the government should ask those groups to let people know that Evusheld is not as powerful as it once was.

Medicare, the federal health program, has a large number of patients who are immune-compromised. A spokesperson for the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services did not respond to a request from CNN for comment about Evusheld.

A depressing message

It gets even worse for the immune-compromised.

If their Evusheld fails to protect them and they do contract COVID-19, many of them can’t take the antiviral drug Paxlovid, because other drugs they may take interact with it.

There is another COVID-19 treatment — a monoclonal antibody called bebtelovimab — but it isn’t expected to neutralize the BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 variants, according to the FDA. Those two variants represented 35% of the new infections in the U.S. in the week ending Nov. 5, according to the CDC.

And new treatments aren’t coming anytime soon.

“Even if we got money today, it would take us many months to bring a monoclonal into the marketplace, and we don’t have the money today anyway,” Jha told CNN last month.

That leaves Koffman, the medical director of the CLL Society, trying to get the word out to immune-compromised people that they need to “go back to basics” and “mask up” because “no variant of concern can outsmart an N95 mask.”

It’s not easy to hear this message, he said.

When Evusheld became available at the end of last year, it was a huge relief to many immune-compromised people. Finally, they felt safe to leave the house after two years in lockdown and visit with family and friends.

“It was a little bit of a get out of jail free card for the immune-compromised community,” Koffman said.

But now, when immune-compromised people learn that medicines that once worked so well for them are less effective, they’re “crestfallen,” he said.

So, while he worries about the physical health of immune-compromised people who don’t know they need to be more careful, he also worries about the mental health of people who do realize they may need to change their lives — to travel less, for example, or perhaps avoid indoor holiday gatherings.

“They get depressed because they’ve lost their ability to do stuff,” he said. “So now I’m worried about both groups.”

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