San Diego Union-Tribune

REGION VERIFIES FIRST CASE OF U.K. VARIANT

Man with new virus strain has no travel history, indicating it’s circulatin­g in county

- BY LYNDSAY WINKLEY, PAUL SISSON & GARY ROBBINS

San Diego became the first community in the state, and one of the first in the nation, to detect the presence of a new variant of the novel coronaviru­s, announcing that a local man in his 30s had tested positive for the strain Tuesday.

Confirmed by quick genetic analysis at 3 a.m. Wednesday, the case signals the presence of the same pathogen that caused three-quarters of England’s population — about 40 million people — to go into the strictest tier of that country’s lockdown system.

The new strain of the virus appears capable of spreading more quickly than other versions in circulatio­n.

San Diego’s case is among three known or suspected to be of the U.K. subtype, called B.1.1.7. Media reports indicate that two National Guard members stationed in Colorado are also thought to have the same type of infection. As of Wednesday evening, one had been confirmed while confirmati­on was

still pending for the second.

Dr. Eric McDonald, medical director of the county’s epidemiolo­gy department, said the San Diego resident reported no overseas travel before getting sick and neither has one of the two Colorado cases. Travel history was not yet available for the second.

Absent evidence of travel, it would appear that those with confirmed infections picked up the virus in their communitie­s, strongly suggesting that the U.K. strain is more widespread in the community than people realize.

“There are other cases in San Diego we need to be aware of,” McDonald said.

The San Diego subject appears to have been heeding the current stay-athome order.

“Going back two weeks, the number of activities was also very limited,” McDonald said. “There was no work activity, and there was no specific gathering activity that we’ve talked about being the potential for a community outbreak.”

Scientists across the globe are scrambling to learn as much as they can about B.1.1.7 and another similar strain detected in South Africa that seems like it may have a similarly turbocharg­ed transmissi­on capacity.

Wednesday was busy in terms of COVID developmen­ts.

On Wednesday, San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria announced a new executive order that mandates stricter enforcemen­t of health orders. San Diego police officers, Gloria said, are now expected to work with the City Attorney’s Office to more aggressive­ly pursue $1,000 fines for those who “blatantly and egregiousl­y defy the provision of state and county public health orders.”

Sharp HealthCare, the region’s largest health system, also found itself under scrutiny for administer­ing 300 doses of coronaviru­s vaccine to local first responders. Police and firefighte­rs are not in the top tier of the state’s vaccinatio­n prioritiza­tion schedule, which says that doses should go to front-line health care workers and nursing home residents and staff.

In an email, a Sharp official said that the doses, which keep for up to six months under deep freeze conditions, were about to expire, having nearly reached the end of the five-day period of viability after being thawed and prepared to be used at a walk-in vaccinatio­n clinic for Sharp employees.

Sharp said it is rethinking its planning process for managing vaccine used at walk-in clinics. Thus far, about 10,000 of the 20,000 doses Sharp has received have been used.

San Diego is one of the first communitie­s in the nation to detect the U.K. strain, likely because its biomedical community has apparently been paying close attention to informatio­n coming out of the United Kingdom since the new version of the virus was announced in early December.

Researcher­s noticed that a particular COVID molecular test made by testing giant Thermo Fisher that targets three different spots in the SARS-COV-2 virus’ genome has a serendipit­ous ability to signal that a coronaviru­s may be of the U.K. type.

The U.K. variant is known to have a mutation that deletes a small portion of its S gene, the one that determines the shape of the distinctiv­e spike surface proteins that give it its name.

Because the Thermo

Fisher test targets three different locations, it is still possible to get a positive with only two of the three making a match. Results that come back with two hits and a miss on the S gene target, then, are possibly of the U.K. variant. However, other mutated versions of the virus also delete the same S gene target, so genetic sequencing is required as a second step to confirm that the virus involved is indeed B.1.1.7.

This whole sequence occurred very rapidly in San Diego with UC San Diego’s EXCITE lab detecting the S drop and immediatel­y forwarding a sample to Scripps Research immunologi­st and molecular biologist Kristian Andersen, whose lab worked through the night to answer the question, delivering a result in the wee hours of the morning.

Speaking at the county’s weekly COVID-19 news conference Wednesday afternoon, Andersen warned that, as has been the case in the U.K., the variant is likely already among us. He called for a rededicati­on to the hand-washing, mask-wearing and social-distancing practices that have waned in recent months as many complain of COVID-19 fatigue.

“Detecting this lineage here doesn’t really change what we need to do other than we need to do it better,” Andersen said.

He said that no one knows for sure whether the U.K. variant will prove as easily transmissi­ble in Southern California as it seems to be in England.

“We should expect that the same is going to be true here in San Diego, but we don’t yet know that really is going to be the case,” he said.

UC San Diego’s EXCITE lab has been processing about 1,000 samples per day, determinin­g whether they are positive or negative. The samples are drawn from the school’s students, faculty and staff as well as from some public schools in San Diego County and the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department.

It was not clear Wednesday whether the person who tested positive had any direct connection to UCSD.

“We are determinin­g whether the variant came from a student or someone else,” said Dr. David Brenner, vice chancellor of health sciences at UC San Diego.

Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, said he is very familiar with Andersen’s work, which has earned a national and internatio­nal reputation. Detecting the variant so quickly, he said, is likely a harbinger of things to come. Though scientific hubs like San Diego are usually the first to detect such arrivals, the fact that no one so far reports foreign travel means that there is more of the same out there waiting to be found.

“I think this virus is probably seeded throughout much of the U.S.,” he said.

It should, he added, be a sobering reminder that this is not the year for a big New Year’s Eve party.

“Celebrate with the ones you love that you’ve been in the same exposure bubble with,” he said. “The greatest gift you can give them is that they not be exposed to this virus so that they will be around for New Year’s Eve 2021.”

 ?? SAM HODGSON U-T ?? Patrons dine and drink in front of Princess Pub & Grille in Little Italy on Wednesday. Later in the day, Mayor Todd Gloria said he signed an executive order for police to intensify enforcemen­t of public health rules.
SAM HODGSON U-T Patrons dine and drink in front of Princess Pub & Grille in Little Italy on Wednesday. Later in the day, Mayor Todd Gloria said he signed an executive order for police to intensify enforcemen­t of public health rules.
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