The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has found that although the Omicron variant of concern is more virulent, people who get reinfected with the highly transmissible variant, may experience fewer symptoms than they did during their initial bout with the virus.
The CDC, in its weekly latest Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report published recently, reported the case of six people in a single household with confirmed cases of Omicron.
Of the six, an unvaccinated man, aged 48 years (the index patient), had recently returned from Nigeria. Before his return trip to the US, he tested negative for COVID on November 21, but tested positive on November 26. The man was first infected with COVID in last year.
After returning from Nigeria, he had unmasked close contact with five household contacts. One household contact was fully vaccinated and had previous symptomatic COVID in 2020, three were unvaccinated and were infected with COVID last year, and one remained unvaccinated and had mild upper respiratory symptoms in last year, but tested negative for COVID.
While the index patient tested positive on November 26, all six household members aged 11-48 years experienced symptom onset during November 24-26. The median interval between earliest possible exposure to the index patient and symptom onset was 73 hours, the CDC said.
Importantly, the CDC found that the five patients - all cases of reinfection- described the symptoms and severity of their recent COVID infection as being similar to or milder than those during their first infection. "The five reinfected patients experienced fewer current symptoms, including loss of taste (none), loss of smell (none), and subjective fever (two), compared with symptoms reported during their first infections (four, four, and four, respectively). The unvaccinated patient without a previous COVID-19 diagnosis experienced cough, joint pain, congestion, fever, and chills," the CDC said.