Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Stealth omicron’ revealing secrets to scientists

- BY LAURA UNGAR

The coronaviru­s mutant widely known as “stealth omicron” is now causing more than a third of new omicron cases around the world, but scientists still don’t know how it could affect the future of the pandemic.

Researcher­s are slowly revealing clues about the strain, a descendant of omicron known as BA.2, while warily watching it become ever more prevalent.

“We’re all keeping an eye on BA.2 just because it has done particular­ly well in some parts of the world,” including parts of Asia, Africa and Europe, said Dr. Wesley Long, a pathologis­t at Houston Methodist in Texas.

This week, a technical advisory group for the World Health Organizati­on advised public health authoritie­s to monitor it as a distinct omicron strain.

Early research suggests it spreads faster than the original omicron and in rare cases can sicken people even if they’ve already had an omicron infection. There’s mixed research on whether it causes more severe disease, but vaccines appear just as effective against it.

Overall cases are falling in some places where the variant is becoming more prevalent, offering some hope that the latest troubling version of the virus won’t send cases skyrocketi­ng again as experts try to learn more.

WORLDWIDE SPREAD

BA.2 has been found in more than 80 countries and all 50 U.S. states.

In a recent report, the WHO said BA.2 was dominant in 18 countries and it represente­d about 36% of sequenced omicron cases submitted in the most recent week to a publicly available internatio­nal database where scientists share coronaviru­s data. That’s up from 19% two weeks earlier.

In the United States, BA.2 caused about 4% of COVID cases during the week ending Feb. 19, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The percentage was lower in some regions and higher in others — hitting about 7% in New England.

WHAT’S KNOWN

BA.2 has lots of mutations. It’s been dubbed “stealth” because it lacks a genetic quirk of the original omicron that allowed health officials to rapidly differenti­ate it from delta using a certain PCR test. So while the test can detect a BA.2 infection, it looks like a delta infection.

Initial research suggests BA.2 is more transmissi­ble than the original omicron — about 30% more contagious by one estimate.

But vaccines can protect people from getting sick. Scientists in the United Kingdom found that they provide the same level of protection from both types of omicron.

A bout with the original omicron also seems to provide “strong protection” against reinfectio­n with BA.2, according to early studies cited by the WHO.

But getting BA.2 after infection from the original omicron strain is possible, says new research out of Denmark. Study authors noted 187 total reinfectio­ns, including 47 with BA.2 occurring shortly after a bout the original strain, mostly in young, unvaccinat­ed people with mild disease. They concluded that such reinfectio­ns do occur but are rare. Like other early studies on BA.2, this one has been posted online but not reviewed by independen­t scientists.

 ?? NIAID/NIH VIA AP ?? This 2020 electron microscope image made available by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases shows a Novel Coronaviru­s SARS-CoV-2 particle.
NIAID/NIH VIA AP This 2020 electron microscope image made available by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases shows a Novel Coronaviru­s SARS-CoV-2 particle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States