← Return to Bamlanivimab monoclonal antibodies interacting with COVID vaccines

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@sueinmn

@mlmc21 Thank you for telling us about your experience.

@mal I have looked all over the Lilly and CDC sites, and didn't find a definitive answer for you. So, I went to my secondary source. My daughter is a telemed nurse, and has been dealing with all things Covid since last March. I asked her about what they tell patients about vaccine after infusion and why. Her large urban hospital/clinic group updates their Covid guidance at least daily.

Their advice, from the Infectious Disease and Epidemiology docs is to wait 90 days after test-confirmed infection or antibody infusion and get the vaccine.

The reason - the monoclonal antibodies are intended to provide a temporary boost to the immune system, and they don't know how long the antibodies will last. Typical after-virus antibodies range from undetectable to lasting about 4-5 months for most people.

With the vaccine there is good evidence that immunity lasts at least 7 months, based on regular testing of the early recipients in the clinical trials.

Also, her plea to you: "Please get vaccinated - we see people every day who have Covid for the second time. Even though this can and does happen after full vaccination symptoms are more mild."
Sue

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Replies to "@mlmc21 Thank you for telling us about your experience. @mal I have looked all over the..."

I am thinking that I will routinely check my antibody levels (through blood donations) and once they are no longer present; I will then get the vaccinations.