Business Standard

Why coronaviru­s variants are causing alarm

- JASON GALE

31 August

A succession of more-transmissi­ble SARS-COV-2 variants has emerged over the past year, each harbouring a constellat­ion of mutations. The most worrisome so far is the so-called delta variant.

Is delta more virulent?

Possibly as it appears patients are more likely to be hospitalis­ed with delta than with the previously dominant alpha strain. A large UK study published in Lancet Infectious Diseases showed Covid-19 patients have a 2.3 times increased risk of being hospitalis­ed within two weeks if they have delta compared with an alpha infection. That fit with an earlier study from Scotland that showed the risk of hospital admission was almost doubled in those with delta versus alpha. Doctors in India have linked delta to a broader array of Covid symptoms, including hearing impairment. Other evidence found delta had some propensity to evade antibodyba­sed treatments and carries an increased risk of reinfectio­n in those who have recovered from Covid caused by another strain.

How do variants affect the vaccines?

Scientists pay the most attention to mutations in the gene that encodes the virus’s spike protein, which plays a key role in its entry into cells and is targeted by vaccines. The four variants of concern — alpha, beta, gamma and delta — all carry multiple mutations affecting the spike protein. That raises questions about whether people who have developed antibodies to the “regular” or “wild type” strain — either from a vaccine or from having recovered from Covid — will be able to fight off the new variants. In most instances, the variants of concern do lead to a reduction in vaccine effectiven­ess of varying degrees, though the shots mostly retain their ability to protect against severe disease, according to the WHO.

What else is out there?

The WHO has highlighte­d the risk that more variants will emerge given the ongoing high rates of transmissi­on globally. For example, scientists in South Africa reported in August a potential variant of interest dubbed C.1.2 that carries “concerning constellat­ions of mutations”. It was first identified in May in the provinces of Mpumalanga and Gauteng, where Johannesbu­rg and the capital, Pretoria, are situated. By August 13, it had been found in six of South Africa’s nine provinces as well as the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius, Portugal, New Zealand and Switzerlan­d. Even in South Africa, as of late August, C.1.2 comprised just 2 per cent of the known SARSCOV-2 variants spreading there.

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