Are you a NOVID? About a third of us have never had COVID-19, this might be why (2024)

Throughout the pandemic, Australia has recorded 10.4 million cases of COVID-19, with the majority occurring this year.

This is without doubt an underestimate, as not everyone tests for COVID-19 or reports their positive results.

The latest survey of donor blood looked at the proportion of people who had antibodies against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. It found at least two thirds of Australians have been infected.

That leaves about a third of the population who are yet to have the virus.

I'm one such "NOVID" – despite multiple confirmed COVID-19 exposures during the pandemic, I'm yet to have symptoms and test positive.

Are you a NOVID? About a third of us have never had COVID-19, this might be why (1)

So what do we know about NOVIDs?

First, we might not actually be NOVIDs

Some people claiming they've never had COVID-19 might be surprised to learn they have virus-targeting antibodies in their blood that could only have been generated by infection.

The reliance on home rapid antigen tests (RATs), which are less sensitive than PCR testing, will contribute to many people failing to definitively determine whether they have COVID-19.

Under ideal testing conditions, the best tests detect SARS-CoV-2 infection more than 95 per centof the time. However in the real world, the detection rate is lower.

If you have mild symptoms that don't last long, you're less likely to test repeatedly and may miss your window to get a positive result. So some COVID-19 cases will escape detection by RATs.

At this point, it's important to distinguish between being infected with SARS-CoV-2 and experiencing the illness (COVID-19) caused by this infection. You can be infected without experiencing COVID-19 symptoms – this is called asymptomatic infection.

It's unclear what proportion of Omicron sub-variant cases are asymptomatic. Early in the pandemic, one in six people infected were asymptomatic and it could now be as high as 50 per centor more with Omicron.

So, many NOVIDs will have been infected with SARS-CoV-2, generated antibodies to the virus, but did not experience or notice any COVID-19 symptoms at the time, did not test and have remained unaware of their infection status (and whether they were unknowingly transmitting the virus).

Are you a NOVID? About a third of us have never had COVID-19, this might be why (2)

What role does the immune system play?

Everyone's immune system is different. How your immune system responds to a particular infection is affected by many factors including your genes, gender, age, diet, sleep patterns, stress levels, history of other infections and illnesses, medications, vaccination status, and level of virus exposure.

So are some people less likely to get COVID-19 because of the strength of their immune system?

The status of our immune system at any given moment will impact our susceptibility to disease. So it's unsurprising the people most susceptible to severe COVID-19 are those with less effective immunity because they have chronic diseases, are immune-suppressed or elderly.

The other key variable is the virus. SARS-CoV-2 continues to evolve with new Omicron subvariants continuing to emerge. This will affect how the virus interacts with us and the relative impact of different factors affecting our immune protection and susceptibility.

SARS-CoV-2 has proven itself to be particularly adept at evolving to generate viral variants that can evade our established immune protection. In addition, our immune protection is not stable and will begin to wane after a couple of months if not boosted by vaccination or infection.

Are my genes protecting me?

Let's consider something that is relatively stable: your genes.

Scientists looking for associations between specific genes and disease can undertake genome-wide association studies. The effect of individual genetic variations on disease risk is usually very small, so identifying them requires large numbers of people and factoring in other variables that make us all different.

In once such study, researchers compared genomes of nearly 50,000 people with COVID-19 with the genomes of 2 million people without known infection.

They identified regions in the genome (loci) associated with contracting COVID-19 and other genetic regions associated with disease severity. So this is evidence that, like many other diseases, certain genes do modify the risk of COVID-19.

While association is not causation, these types of genomic studies point us in a direction to better understand the biology of COVID-19 to address questions such as who might be at risk of severe disease or long COVID and assist development of new therapies to prevent these outcomes.

Another study identified a small number of critically ill COVID-19 patients with rare gene variants. These could be directly linked to defective antiviral immunity.

So for a very small number of people, it appears their genes make them more susceptible to COVID. But for the vast majority of people, the picture is far more complicated.

Could I have immunity from previous infection with a similar virus?

SARS-CoV-2 is not the only respiratory coronavirus that regularly infects humans. Four others – 229E, HKU-1, OC43 and NL63 – share some similarity with SARS-CoV-2.

Most adults would have been infected by these viruses multiple times throughout their life. This raises the possibility that immunity generated by lifetime and/or recent exposure to these other coronaviruses might generate immunity that provides some protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection and symptomatic COVID-19.

More research is needed to better understand this, but the existing evidence is compelling and it's certainly plausible.

The bottom line is there are many reasons why people who socialise and inevitably interact with people with COVID-19 believe they've never had COVID themselves. For most NOVIDs, it has been a combination of vaccination, leveraging a healthy immune system, sensible decisions and luck that have kept them COVID-free thus far.

Of course, luck eventually runs out, so enjoy your NOVID status while you can.

Nathan Bartlett is associate professor at the School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy at the University of Newcastle.This piece first appeared on The Conversation.

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Are you a NOVID? About a third of us have never had COVID-19, this might be why (2024)

FAQs

Why have some people never had COVID? ›

According to new research, over the long-term it's probably genetics that drives an individual's level of susceptibility to SARS-Cov-2.

What percentage of Americans have never had COVID-19? ›

Resource Links. Nearly 1 in 4 U.S. adults and older teens had still not caught COVID-19 by the end of last year, according to new estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, while 77.5% had antibodies from at least one prior infection.

What is it called if you've never had COVID? ›

Stories of those who've somehow avoided the virus seem impossible to fathom now that three years have passed since it first started spreading around the world in early 2020. But for scientists, these so-called “super-dodgers,” or Novids, or COVID virgins, as some are calling them, are important research subjects.

Why do some people never test positive for COVID? ›

Antibodies and other viruses

Another reason an exposed person may test negative is that vaccination or prior infection has created antibodies. In these cases, when someone is exposed to the virus, those antibodies are activated and rapidly clear the virus before they become infected or symptomatic.

Has anyone ever had COVID twice? ›

Reinfection with the virus that causes COVID-19 occurs when you are infected, recover, and then get infected again. You can be reinfected multiple times. Reinfections are most often mild, but severe illness can occur. If you are reinfected, you can also spread the virus to others.

When did COVID start? ›

In 2020, life changed across the globe. Though initially discovered in Wuhan, China, in late 2019, COVID-19 entered the conversation in the U.S. in January 2020, when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) alerted the nation of the outbreak abroad.

What percent of the population is immune to COVID-19? ›

New research from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention indicates that by early fall 2022, an overwhelming percentage of American adults had antibodies to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. According to the study, 96% of 72,748 blood donors aged 16 years and older included in the study had antibodies.

Is anyone immune to COVID-19? ›

Many health care workers and others have never contracted the disease despite being heavily exposed. Scientists around the world are studying whether genetic mutations make some people immune to the infection or resistant to the illness.

What percentage of Americans have had the COVID vaccine? ›

Compare states' vaccination progress or select a state to see detailed information
State% of population with at least one dose% fully vaccinated
CA85.2%74.2%
CO82.2%72.4%
CT>95%*81.8%
DE86.3%71.8%
47 more rows
May 10, 2024

Why do I always get COVID? ›

There are two main reasons for COVID-19 reinfection. The first reason is that the virus that causes COVID-19 is always changing. Sometimes, the changes are so big that our immune system doesn't recognize the virus anymore and is more susceptible to getting sick again.

How long are you immune to COVID after having it? ›

The immune response from a COVID-19 infection usually tamps down after 3-4 months, says Kawsar Talaat, MD, a vaccinologist and associate professor in the Department of International Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland.

Can you live with someone with COVID and not get it? ›

Because coronavirus is transmitted through close contact with someone who is infected, it's common for the virus to spread within homes. But a positive diagnosis for one person doesn't always mean others will be infected.

Why didn't I catch COVID from my family? ›

There are many reasons why it is not unusual for people in the same household to not catch Covid-19 from each other. Right from the start of the pandemic, it was found that some people were much more likely to catch Covid than others, and some were naturally immune.

Can you test negative but still have COVID? ›

A negative COVID-19 test means the test did not detect the virus, but this doesn't rule out that you could have an infection. If you used an antigen test, follow FDA recommendations for repeat testing. If you have symptoms: You may have COVID-19 but tested before the virus was detectable.

Can someone test negative for COVID and still be a carrier? ›

Can you be contagious after a negative COVID test? If you test negative with a PCR test, you are likely not contagious. But if you test negative with an at-home test, the answer will depend in part “on whether the negative COVID test is at the beginning of feeling sick or on the way to recovery,” Mina says.

Why are some people asymptomatic to COVID? ›

Genetics might explain some of these asymptomatic cases, it turns out. In a new study appearing in Nature, people with a particular gene variant appeared to have preexisting T cell immunity to the virus, likely a holdover from previous bouts of the common cold.

Is COVID genetic immunity? ›

It's genetics. Scientists have discovered that many people who avoided COVID symptoms did get infected, but had a genetic mutation that trained the immune system to mount a supercharged response to the virus because it noticed similarities to the common cold.

Why are some people more susceptible to COVID? ›

Being immunocompromised can make you more likely to get very sick from COVID-19 or be sick for a longer period of time. People who are immunocompromised or are taking medicines that weaken their immune system may not be protected even if they are up to date on their vaccines.

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