Hindustan Times (East UP)

‘Delta variant ups herd immunity threshold, 80%+ need antibodies’

- Anonna Dutt anonna.dutt@htlive.com HT

NEW DELHI: The Delta variant has meant that close to 80-90% of the population needs to be vaccinated or have antibodies from a previous infection in order for a protective wall of population immunity to be strong enough to slow down the virus, researcher­s from two premier Delhi institutes said, citing sero surveillan­ce data from before the April-May wave of infections in the Capital and the outbreak that happened despite it.

Herd immunity is reached by highly effective vaccines that can stop transmissi­on, but it has been complicate­d in case of Sars-Cov-2 due to mutations and waning immunity.

The mutations in the Delta variant made it significan­tly more transmissi­ble -- by some estimates, more than twice when compared to the virus that was first found in Wuhan.

With that virus, which was estimated to have a basic reproducti­on number (the number of people the virus can spread to on average, also known as R-nought or R0) was between 2 and 3, and the herd immunity threshhold was considered by 60-70%. Now, according to a pre-print study by researcher­s from Maulana Azad Medical College, Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences, and the Delhi government health department, this threshold may be 80-90% .

The research refers to Delhi’s January round of sero surveillan­ce to show that despite 56.13% people testing positive for antibodies, there was a massive wave of Covid-19 with over 28,000 cases reported in a single day at its peak in late April.

“The antibody seropreval­ence in January showed a more than two-times increase, coinciding with a rapid decline in the test positivity rate and the daily new incident cases suggestive of high population­level immunity. The high seropreval­ence through natural infection was insufficie­nt to achieve herd immunity and avert the second wave of the pandemic in Delhi,” the study said. “Rapid Covid-19 vaccinatio­n with the highest possible coverage remains the most feasible means of combating and ending the Covid-19 pandemic, even though a previous infection provides higher and longer term immunity,” said the paper.

The researcher­s also suggest that serial sero-surveys be continued to monitor the waning levels of antibodies in the population. Genetic sequencing is also needed to keep an eye out for variants that may be more effective in evading immunity, according to the study.

Dr Nandini Sharma, first author of the study and professor of community medicine at

Maulana Azad Medical College, said, “In the study we assumed the R0 of the virus to be 2 and showed that to prevent a huge surge in infections, hospitalis­ations, and deaths we need 80 to 90% of the population to be sero-positive either through infection or vaccinatio­n. The data is from January when we did not anticipate a second wave due to delta whose R0 is much more.”

She said, “Now, we are unlikely to have an outbreak of delta. But the cases might go up if a new variant emerges that is more infectious and can evade the immunity.”

There is a need to continue following Covid-19 appropriat­e behaviour and preventing large gatherings for now, she said.

Dr Ekta Gupta, professor of virology at ILBS said, “The number of cases have gone down in Delhi because of the high levels of exposure in April and May, along with a good pace of vaccinatio­n. This, despite people not following Covid-19 appropriat­e behaviour – this is clear from the fact that we are seeing other respirator­y diseases like flu in Delhi again, which reduced because of masking.”

 ?? ?? A woman gets vaccinated against Covid vaccine, in New Delhi.
A woman gets vaccinated against Covid vaccine, in New Delhi.

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