Reinfection with SARS-CoV-2 in a patient undergoing chemotherapy for lymphoma: Case report.

Journal: Journal Of The Association Of Medical Microbiology And Infectious Disease Canada = Journal Officiel De L'Association Pour La Microbiologie Medicale Et L'infectiologie Canada
Published:
Abstract

Background: COVID-19 is usually a time-limited disease. However, prolonged infections and reinfections can occur among immunocompromised patients. It can be difficult to distinguish a prolonged infection from a new one, especially when reinfection occurs early.

Methods: We report the case of a 57-year-old man infected with SARS-CoV-2 while undergoing chemotherapy for follicular lymphoma. He experienced prolonged symptomatic infection for 3 months despite a 5-day course of remdesivir and eventually deteriorated and died.

Results: Viral genome sequencing showed that his final deterioration was most likely due to reinfection. Serologic studies confirmed that the patient did not seroconvert.

Conclusions: This case report highlights that reinfection can occur rapidly (62-67 d) among immunocompromised patients after a prolonged disease. We provide substantial proof of prolonged infection through repeated nucleic acid amplification tests and positive viral culture at day 56 of the disease course, and we put forward evidence of reinfection with viral genome sequencing.

Authors
Florence Côté, Julie Bestman Smith, Marie Gourdeau, Shawn Simpson, Marie-ève Hamelin, Julie Carbonneau, Antoine Chiasson, Marieke Rozendaal, Martin Smith, Guy Boivin