Sunday Tribune

Expert dismiss es Flurona, Deltacron

- NATHAN CRAIG nathan.craig@inl.co.za

CLAIMS of Flurona and Deltacron have been made but the local expert who assisted in discoverin­g the Beta variant has rubbished them and broke down the variant found in France.

Richard Lessells is an infectious disease specialist with the Kwazulu-natal Research Innovation and Sequencing Platform (Krisp) team.

The Krisp team was the first to sequence and identify the Beta variant that drove the country’s second wave and exerted global dominance.

Now there are claims from various countries that they have experience­d cases of Deltacron and Flurona.

Lessells said Flurona was a nonsense term that was coined to describe a situation when someone was infected with Covid-19 and the influenza virus at the same time.

“This phenomenon where someone might be infected with two respirator­y viruses concurrent­ly is actually not that unusual as respirator­y viruses will often circulate in the community at the same time,” he said.

However, Lessells said there was more influenza circulatin­g now than at other times during the Covid-19 pandemic, so, we would expect to occasional­ly see cases where both viruses were detected.

“There is no evidence that this makes people sicker so it is not something people should specifical­ly worry about,” he said.

Deltacron was a portmantea­u of the Delta and Omicron variants that occurred in Cyprus, Greece.

Lessells said genomic sequencing suggested that some sections of the genetic code looked like Omicron and others looked like Delta.

“We know that recombinat­ion can occur with coronaviru­ses but so far it hasn’t been a major feature of the pandemic.

“What was initially flagged as a possible recombinan­t in Cyprus actually turned out to be a result of contaminat­ion in the lab,” said Lessells.

He said due to the fact that a batch of samples for sequencing might include Omicron and Delta samples, contaminat­ion during the sequencing process could result in a sequence that looks like a recombinan­t.

“However, a more detailed analysis, as in this case, can show that it was a result of contaminat­ion,” he said.

Recently news circulated about a variant in France, called B.1.640, and labelled variant under monitoring (VUM) by the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), but Lessells said it was not a concern for the country.

“It was first detected in September last year and was designated as a VUM by the WHO on November 22.

“Another example of a VUM is the C.1.2 that we were tracking in the country before the arrival of Omicron,” he said.

According to global data the B.1.640 was not spreading widely anywhere in the world, and in France, Omicron was becoming the dominant variant while the country was exiting the fourth wave.

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