Covid-19 immunity likely to lower risk of another SARS pandemic – study

24 Mar 2026 • 6:00 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

The world’s most free-thinking newspaper

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Global immunity to Covid-19 is likely to offer protection against other SARS-type viruses, ultimately lowering the risk of a future coronavirus pandemic, scientists have found.

Researchers led by a team at the MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research (CVR) combined information from patient antibody samples with mathematical modelling to examine levels of immunity against SARS-type viruses in the general population.

They found that as well as high levels of immunity to SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for the Covid-19 pandemic, the population also had immunity against a range of “sarbecoviruses” – the wider family of viruses to which SARS-CoV-2 belongs.

They said Covid-19 immunity, whether from infections during the pandemic or vaccinations, could even provide a “biological barrier” against sarbecoviruses that have not been discovered yet.

They suggested this broader immunity may be key to slowing down, or stopping, a future pandemic by a previously unknown sarbecovirus.

Pablo Murcia, professor of integrative virology from the CVR, said: “Our global experience with Covid-19 has generated a biological barrier to other coronaviruses.

“While this does not mean we are immune to all future threats, infection and vaccine-derived immunity to SARS-CoV-2 has made it much harder for other sarbecoviruses to start the next pandemic.

“Our study shows the circulation of SARS-CoV-2 in the general population, alongside global vaccination campaigns, generated widespread immunity against related sarbecoviruses, creating an ‘immunity shield’ against the emergence of a novel sarbecovirus in humans.”

The team also found existing Covid-19 vaccines could help slow or stop the spread of any potential new sarbecovirus, dubbed “SARS-CoV-X”.

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Brian Willett, professor of viral immunology at the CVR, said: “Our results suggest that our current vaccines might be effective against the emergence of a new coronavirus.

“Our mathematical models strongly suggest that the use of existing Covid-19 vaccines against any new and emerging sarbecoviruses reduced the chance of sustained transmission.

“We found that current vaccines would be most beneficial if implemented soon after the first SARS-CoV-X case was found.

“By contrast, delays in implementing any preventative vaccination would likely reduce its effectiveness.”

The study, Post-pandemic changes in population immunity have reduced the likelihood of emergence of zoonotic coronaviruses, is published in the journal Nature Communications.