Orlando Sentinel

Some subvariant­s more easily bypass immunity

- By Caroline Catherman ccatherman@orlandosen­tinel.com; @CECatherma­n on Twitter

As COVID-19 cases continue to creep up in Central Florida, additional evidence has emerged that previously infected or vaccinated people may have less protection against new omicron variants than other types of the virus.

The omicron variant of COVID-19, first detected in the U.S. in November, is one of many mutations that have emerged as the COVID-19 virus attempts to spread by replicatin­g itself.

Omicron, seemingly better able to infect previously infected or vaccinated people than past variants, launched Florida cases to record highs last winter.

From omicron, a more infectious strain emerged: BA.2. After BA.2, strains seemingly even more contagious emerged: BA.2.12.1, BA.4 and BA.5.

About three weeks ago, Orange County, Altamonte Springs and Casselberr­y began testing wastewater for traces of BA.2.12.1, the most common variant in the U.S. right now, followed by BA.5 then BA.4, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

As suspected, they found BA.2.12.1 in their sewer service areas, which stretch throughout Orange and Seminole Counties.

“Orange County can confirm that BA.2.12.1 is present in our community’s wastewater system, along with the original Omicron and BA.2 subvariant,” Orange County Utilities spokespers­on Sarah Lux said in an email.

COVID-19 is detected in sewage by analyzing wastewater for SARS-CoV-2 viral genomes — fragments of the virus found in infected or recently infected people’s stool.

In Monday’s sample, 52.8% of the genomes in the Altamonte Springs sewer service area and 42.9% of the genomes in Casselberr­y’s sewer service area were BA.2.12.1, Altamonte Springs City Manager Frank Martz said.

The high prevalence of these omicron subvariant­s suggests Central Florida residents shouldn’t view vaccinatio­n or prior infection as a guarantee they won’t get infected.

New data published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Wednesday finds the BA.2.12.1, BA.4 and BA.5 subvariant­s “substantia­lly escape” antibodies that are supposed to protect people who were vaccinated or previously infected from getting the virus again. This echoes the conclusion of a draft of a study from scientists at Columbia University’s Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center.

The researcher­s behind Wednesday’s study, from Harvard Medical School’s Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, found both vaccinated people and people who were infected with earlier versions of omicron produced lower levels of antibodies when exposed to BA.2.12.1, BA.4 and BA.5 than when exposed to other versions of omicron.

Even though vaccines are less likely to protect against infection, they will likely still hold up against severe disease, Dr. Dan Barouch, an author of the paper and director of the Center for Virology and Vaccine Research at Beth Israel, told CNN.

“Our data suggest that these new Omicron subvariant­s will likely be able to lead to surges of infections in population­s with high levels of vaccine immunity as well as natural BA1 and BA2 immunity,” Barouch wrote. “However, it is likely that vaccine immunity will still provide substantia­l protection against severe disease with BA4 and BA5.”

Next week, the lab serving Orange County, Altamonte Springs, and Casselberr­y will begin analyzing wastewater across Central Florida with a newly developed test for BA.4 and BA.5 variants, Lux and Altamonte Springs City Manager Frank Martz said.

Orange, Seminole, Lake, and Osceola counties currently have a high COVID-19 community level along with the majority of Florida, according to the CDC’s website.

By the CDC’s definition, this means hospitaliz­ation rates are high enough that the current COVID-19 wave could threaten resources in most Central Florida counties if efforts to curb the spread aren’t taken.

The CDC recommends mask-wearing in any county with high community levels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States