Global Times

Fighting Coronaviru­s: Imported infection spreads across province

Virologist­s fear new virus variety more infectious, harder to detect

- By Liu Caiyu

An extra-long infection chain in Harbin, Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province, has extended to more neighborin­g regions, sounding the alarm over the infectivit­y of the imported case.

North China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region became the second provincial region to be affected by patients in Heilongjia­ng, following Liaoning Province.

Hulun Buir government said the confirmed patient in the Inner Mongolia city is related to Harbin, a city where an imported case from the US has caused infections of at least 50 people.

Epidemiolo­gists and virologist­s reached by the Global Times on Monday said the long infection chain from Harbin has transforme­d their knowledge of the coronaviru­s, which may be a different genotype from the one that spread in China earlier, and they stressed the acute importance to contain the virus soon.

Zeng Guang, chief epidemiolo­gist of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said “We shall pay great attention to the small-scale outbreak in Harbin, which has a clear and long infection chain, and they have exposed some new characteri­stics of the coronaviru­s,” indicating the unsuspecte­d infectivit­y of the disease.

Yang Zhanqiu, deputy director of the pathogen biology department at Wuhan University, told the Global Times on Monday that the genotype of the coronaviru­s that spread through the Harbin chain might have come from overseas and Chinese people might be more susceptibl­e to this new coronaviru­s genotype.

Yang warned the outbreak in Harbin must be given full attention. If it is not fully controlled, the regional outbreak would spread widely because it comes as China is resuming work and production and population flows are recovering.

The case also underlined the importance of preventing imported cases from spreading,

Yang said, noting that closedloop management and prevention of community spread are critical.

The original imported case in Harbin was a Chinese passenger surnamed Han who flew from the US on March 19. Contact tracing revealed that more than 50 cases of COVID-19 were related to her, either directly or indirectly, including secondary clustered infections at two hospitals. Some 4,000 people are under screening to check for close contacts due to the hospital outbreak.

Han took four nucleic acid tests and antibody tests, all negative, but passed the virus to her neighbor. Local health authoritie­s later confirmed Han had been infected with the COVID-19. Beijing on April 14 also reported an imported case from the US who was confirmed to be infected after negative test results at a hospital and the quarantine center.

“Han’s case has warned us that there may be inadequacy in our detection methods. Is our test sensitive enough? Why does the coronaviru­s have such strong infectivit­y while frequent tests are negative?” Zeng asked.

Yang, as a virologist, noted that a new genotype of the coronaviru­s could affect the effectiven­ess of China’s test kits, which are developed based on virus types previously discovered in China.

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