Ottawa Citizen

Team at work on wastewater test for COVID variant

Process should be able to detect as few as 10 cases in city, CHEO researcher says

- ELIZABETH PAYNE epayne@postmedia.com

Ottawa researcher­s are racing against the clock to identify the new, more contagious strain of SARS-CoV-2 in the city's wastewater. If all goes well, testing could begin in a matter of weeks.

During the pandemic, Ottawa has become an ad hoc centre of excellence for tracking the spread of COVID-19 by testing wastewater. Ottawa is the only city in Canada doing daily testing, in a collaborat­ion between researcher­s at CHEO and uOttawa with Ottawa Public Health.

That makes Ottawa well-placed to do some of the urgent work of trying to identify how much of the new, more easily transmissi­ble strain of SARS-CoV-2, the coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19, is in the community, said Tyson Graber, an associate research scientist at the CHEO Research Institute.

Graber and uOttawa's Rob Delatolla lead Ottawa teams that are among groups of researcher­s across Canada working on tests to identify the new variant through wastewater. They include scientists from the University of Guelph and the Public Health Agency of Canada who are close to having a test.

Graber said he expect there should be an answer within two or three weeks on whether the testing methods being developed in Ottawa or elsewhere work.

“Things are going to evolve very rapidly,” Graber said. “Everyone is working 24/7 on this.”

Identifyin­g the spread of the variant could be a game-changer as Ontario enters the most deadly stage of the pandemic. On Thursday, Ontario recorded its deadliest day yet from COVID-19, with 89 deaths and 3,519 new cases. Ottawa recorded 164 new cases.

The new variant is 1.7 times more contagious than the original variant, which is raising health concerns around the Globe. It is now dominant in parts of the U.K., where it was first identified. Case numbers and deaths are spiking across that country, leading to more restrictio­ns.

In Ontario, just three cases of the variant have been identified — one of them in Ottawa. But it is unclear what the real numbers are because surveillan­ce, so far, is relatively limited.

Graber said wastewater testing to identify the RNA of the variant should be able to detect as few as 10 cases in Ottawa. It is likely that when a test is ready, Ottawa will have more cases.

“We know we have at least one case and it is expected there are more,” he said.

“If this becomes more prevalent, it is incumbent on us to identify when this variant comes into the population so that public health measures can be changed.”

Targeted swab testing for the new variant is also taking place in Ottawa and elsewhere in Ontario.

It's common for viruses to mutate and create new variants, as SARS-CoV-2 has done, but not all of them have potentiall­y serious public health implicatio­ns.

A second variant identified in South Africa is also causing concern. It is not only considered more easily transmissi­ble, but could be less susceptibl­e to the immune response triggered by vaccines — meaning vaccines could be less effective in stopping it.

Graber said Ottawa researcher­s — most of whom, like him, have never worked in this field before — are hoping to design a broader test that could look for changes in the virus and potentiall­y future viruses.

“Our long-term goal is to do surveillan­ce on the wastewater before these are even known to us.”

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 ?? JEAN LEVAC ?? Researcher Tyson Graber is working on testing Ottawa's wastewater for the new, more contagious variant of COVID-19.
JEAN LEVAC Researcher Tyson Graber is working on testing Ottawa's wastewater for the new, more contagious variant of COVID-19.

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