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Why Colin Powell’s cancer
likely reduced his protection from the Covid-19 vaccine |
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Gen.
Colin Powell died Monday from complications of Covid-19, and experts say his
death shows how important it is for more people to get vaccinated and stop
the spread of the virus. Powell
was fully vaccinated, but a source close to the matter confirmed
to CNN he had multiple myeloma, a type of blood cancer that would
have affected his immune response to
the vaccine, and made it difficult to fight the virus. Peggy
Cifrino, Powell's chief of staff, said Powell, 84, also had Parkinson's
disease, a neurodegenerative disorder. Although
the Covid-19 vaccines provide strong protection against severe disease
and death in healthy people, multiple myeloma patients are among the
immunocompromised groups who may not respond as well, studies have shown. One
study published in Nature in July showed
that only 45% of multiple myeloma patients developed an adequate response to
the vaccine, while 22% had a partial response. One-third had no
response. "When
you have multiple myeloma, the cancer cells fill up the bone marrow and crowd
out all of the cells that are making the immune system, so your immune system
becomes tremendously weakened," said Dr.
Drew Pardoll, Abeloff professor of oncology, medicine,
pathology and molecular biology and genetics at the Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine. Powell's
cancer would have made it difficult to fight off coronavirus infection, and
treatment could have further weakened his immune system. Dr.
Jonathan Reiner, a CNN medical analyst and professor of medicine and surgery
at George Washington University, said Monday that Powell "represented
our most vulnerable population in this country." "He
was over the age of 80, he had cancer, and a treatment for his cancer made
him vulnerable," Reiner told CNN's Jim Sciutto and Erica Hill. "So,
when we try and convince young people who feel that they
are low risk from the virus itself why they need to be
vaccinated, it's to protect our treasures, our people like General
Powell, our grandparents, because while, you know, a 25-year-old may do quite
well with the infection, if they spread it to someone like General Powell,
they will not. That is the imperative for vaccination in this
country." |
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