Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOH eases fears about virus strains

- —STORY BY JOVIC YEE

Regardless of what new strain of coronaviru­s is circulatin­g in the country, the public should continue to observe health measures, Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire said on Monday. She said the D614 and G614 strains of the SARS-COV-2 virus were detected in the country, but added that more research was needed to determine if the virus had mutated and its variants spreading here.

The Department of Health (DOH) said on Monday that regardless of what new strain of coronaviru­s is circulatin­g in the country, the public should continue to observe the existing guidelines meant to curb the spread of COVID-19 infection.

Citing the Philippine Genome Center’s (PGC) study, Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire said the D614 and G614 strains of the SARSCOV-2 virus, which causes the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19), were detected in the country.

She pointed out, however, that more research was needed to determine if the virus did mutate and it is currently in circulatio­n.

The D614G mutation is said to have a “higher possibilit­y” of being more transmissi­ble and infectious, “but we still do not have solid evidence to say that’s happening” in the country, Vergeire said.

“[The PGC’S] study was focused on Quezon City so it might not be a representa­tive sample for the rest of the country … [They have] been authorized by DOH to continue their study so that we could get more informatio­n,” Vergeire said.

“But we continue to remind the public that whatever strain there may be in the Philippine­s of the SARS-COV-2 virus, we just continue to enforce strictly and properly the minimum health standards,” she added.

Variant

The PGC explained in its bulletin that the D614G mutation means the “D” amino acid aspartate at the 614th position of the spike protein “mutated to the ‘G’ amino acid glycine.”

There are at least a thousand amino acids that serve as building blocks of the SARSCOV-2 virus.

The PGC researcher­s said: “Together with the observatio­n that G614 is now the dominant viral state, … the said mutation can increase the viral rate of transmissi­on. However, there is still no definitive evidence showing that carriers of the G614 variant are actually more transmissi­ble than those with D614, and the mutation does not appear to substantia­lly affect clinical outcomes as well.”

A policy paper cited by the PGC said the mutation is “unlikely to have a major impact on the efficacy of vaccines currently in the pipeline.”

In July, various internatio­nal studies found that the coronaviru­s, which originated from a wet market in Wuhan in China’s central Hubei province, has since mutated and become more infectious.

Infectious disease expert and DOH technical advisory group member Dr. Edsel Salvana said this meant the virus could spread faster and overwhelm the country’s health system “if we don’t double our control efforts.”

But he also pointed out that there was “no evidence [that the new strain] makes it more deadly or virulent.”

Año’s case

Meanwhile, Vergeire said it was still too early to say that Interior Secretary Eduardo Año indeed got reinfected with COVID-19. Año first tested positive in March.

She said the department was “assessing him as a whole,” looking into his clinical symptoms and the technical details of his laboratory results.

She reiterated that because of the sensitivit­y of the RT-PCR (reverse transcript­ion polymerase chain reaction) test, it was likely that what was detected from Año was a remnant of the virus.

According to Salvana, tests can also return as false positives if there is contaminat­ion from batch testing or from the positive control sample.

He said a patient could also have inhaled the virus.

“This can theoretica­lly happen when someone is exposed to a positive case who is shedding and is immediatel­y swabbed. There is no guarantee the patient will get the disease because there might not be enough virus to cause the disease, the virus is no longer infectious, or the immune system is able to clear without any clinical disease setting in,” Salvana said in a Facebook post.

Vergeire said about Año’s case that “the scientific community still does not accept that reinfectio­ns are happening.”

“This virus is novel. We are carefully studying everything before we come out with a confirmed announceme­nt. So with reinfectio­n, we still do not have enough evidence for that,” she said.

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