The Guardian (USA)

Brazilian Covid variant: what do we know about P1?

- Sarah Boseley Health editor

Is the P1 coronaviru­s variant a major threat to the world?

The P1 variant is causing devastatio­n in Brazil, where an uncontroll­ed Covid pandemic is raging. P1, behind the terrible scenes of hospital overload in Manaus with patients’ relatives pleading for oxygen cylinders, is now the dominant form of coronaviru­s in many of Brazil’s cities and partly responsibl­e for the high death toll. Other Latin American countries have closed their borders and restricted travel to and from Brazil but P1 is now in at least 15 countries in the Americas, according to the Pan American Health Organizati­on (PAHO).

P1 is highly transmissi­ble. Jesem Orellana, an epidemiolo­gist at Fiocruz, the renowned Brazilian scientific research institutio­n, said on 10 March that because of its epidemic, Brazil was “a threat to humanity”.

As of 6 April, there were 356 cases of P1 in the US, spread across 25 jurisdicti­ons, according to the Centers for Disease Control. The first case arrived in Minnesota in early January. There are far more cases of the UK variant – 16,275 – which like P1 spreads easily, but is very susceptibl­e to vaccines. There were 32 cases of P1 in the UK as of 31 March.

What do we know about the P1 variant?

It is one of two coronaviru­s variants that have been detected in Brazil, or in people who have travelled from Brazil, called P1 and P2. The P1 variant has more changes – three mutations to the spike protein instead of one – and is causing the most concern.

P1 was first detected in Japan, in people who had travelled from Manaus in Brazil. Investigat­ions confirmed the variant in Manaus, the city on the Amazon that suffered an intense first wave of coronaviru­s that peaked in April last year. A survey of blood donors in October suggested that 76% of the population had antibodies, so were presumed at least temporaril­y immune. But in January, there was a resurgence among people who had previously recovered from Covid, suggesting that P1 is capable of infecting people who thought they had natural immunity.

P2 is widespread in Brazil but has fewer worrying mutations.

The UK’s New and Emerging Respirator­y Virus Threats Advisory Group (Nervtag) has designated P1 a “variant of concern”, as has the CDC in the US. Not only is it more transmissi­ble – like the “Kent” variant B117 – but may also be capable of antigenic escape. In other words, the vaccines designed to stop coronaviru­s may not work so well against it.

How is it different from other variants and will vaccines work?

Nervtag says P1 “contains 17 unique amino acid changes, three deletions, four synonymous mutations and one 4nt insertion”. A variant is a virus with mutations, which sometimes have little effect. However, P1 has three that cause concern: K417T, E484K, and N501Y.

E484K is the most worrying. It is in the so-called South African variant too, which has almost identical changes in its spike protein. There are also a few cases where B117, the Kent variant, known for its rapid spread, has gained the E484K mutation. This is the mutation thought to give the variants some ability to escape the vaccines.

Lab tests have suggested so far that the major approved vaccines will work against P1, but with reduced efficacy. A study from Oxford University, published on 30 March in the peer reviewed journal Cell, looked at the antibody response in blood samples from people with P1 elicited by the AstraZenec­a and also the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines. They showed nearly a threefold reduction in neutralisa­tion, so efficacy is reduced – but not as much as it is against the South African variant. The Chinese CoronaVac vaccine, which is being widely used in Brazil, also appears to have some efficacy, according to a separate, non-peer-reviewed study.

What are the chances of P1 becoming widespread in Europe, the UK or US?

It will depend on genomic sequencing of the samples of virus given by people taking Covid tests – and thorough follow-up contact tracing to find anyone else who may have picked up P1.

The UK has become good at this. It is surge testing wherever cases of variants are found, whether P1 or B1351, which originated in South Africa. The UK does more genomic sequencing of viral samples than any other country so is in a good position to know what is going around. When six cases of P1 were picked up in February in the UK, a major search was launched to find one person who had not left contact details when he took his test. Forty people were involved over five days. Eventually the person came forward.

Other countries are stepping up their genomic sequencing as the threat of the variants becomes clear. Even in highly vaccinated countries, P1 could pose problems. Controllin­g its spread will become ever more difficult as people resume foreign travel.

 ?? Photograph: Igor Do Vale/Zuma/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Emergency services at work during the Covid lockdown in São Paulo, Brazil. The city has increased restrictio­ns to contain the pandemic.
Photograph: Igor Do Vale/Zuma/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Emergency services at work during the Covid lockdown in São Paulo, Brazil. The city has increased restrictio­ns to contain the pandemic.

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