Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

WHO says India variant looking more infectious

- JOEL ACHENBACH

The coronaviru­s variant that has spread catastroph­ically in India has seeded itself in dozens of countries, and the World Health Organizati­on has declared it a “variant of concern,” citing preliminar­y evidence that it is more transmissi­ble than some earlier strains of the virus.

It is not clear to what degree the crisis in India — which re- ported 4,200 deaths on Wednesday — has been accelerate­d by the emergence of this variant, known as B.1.617. It is possible the main driver of the outbreak has been mass gatherings in a densely populated nation that still has low levels of vaccinatio­n.

But the WHO, which previously categorize­d the variant as being “of interest,” Monday elevated it to the status “of concern.” WHO epidemiolo­gist Maria Van Kerkhove noted that any of the strains of the virus, SARS-CoV-2, are infectious, “and everything in that sense is of concern.”

She added, “So all of us at home, no matter where we live, no matter what viruses are circulatin­g, we need to make sure that we take all of the measures at hand to prevent ourselves from getting sick.”

Although the WHO treats B.1.617 as a single variant, it has already splintered into three versions, called sub-lineages, with slightly different suites of mutations. Britain last week declared B.1.617.2, which is spreading quickly there, a variant of concern.

In the U.S., that variant accounts for about 3% of cases but is gaining traction, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention surveillan­ce. The CDC lists all three B.1.617 sub-lineages as variants of interest.

The spread of variants of concern across the planet has raised fears the virus will find ways to remain elusive, potentiall­y circumvent­ing vaccines. All viruses mutate, and SARSCoV-2 does not mutate particular­ly quickly compared with other viruses. But having spread explosivel­y, it has had abundant opportunit­ies to shape-shift through random mutation.

Some of the mutations affect the spike protein on the surface of the virus and enable it to bind more easily to cells. This makes the virus more “fit,” as scientists put it.

According to new CDC data, the highly transmissi­ble B.1.1.7 variant first seen in Britain now accounts for an estimated 72% of new infections in the U.S. A variant first seen in Brazil, named P.1, accounts for 6% of new U.S. cases, a rapid increase in recent weeks, the CDC data show. Other variants, including ones first seen in South Africa and California, have decreased in prevalence, CDC epidemiolo­gist Heather Scobie said Wednesday at a meeting of the agency’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices.

Scientists are conducting laboratory tests and studying epidemiolo­gical data to determine whether and to what degree the variants pose threats above and beyond those posed by earlier strains. They are asking many questions simultaneo­usly: How transmissi­ble is the variant? Can it cause a different level of disease? Can it be detected through testing? How does it respond to treatments? Can it be blocked by vaccines or by natural immunity acquired through infection?

A paper posted online Monday and not yet peer-reviewed or published in a scientific journal, reported that the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines produced fewer neutralizi­ng antibodies against one of the India variants, B.1.617.1. But there were still enough antibodies for the vaccines to block infection.

This is akin to trying to defend a fortress against an enemy by building very high walls. The immunizati­on wall isn’t as high in places threatened by some variants, but it’s still high enough to do the job.

Mehul Suthar, a viral immunologi­st at Emory University and senior author of the paper, said the laboratory tests on B.1.617.1 were generally encouragin­g, suggesting the vaccines should be effective against many variants.

“It’s great, and it bodes well for how well these vaccines are working in being able to create a breadth of antibodies that target these variants,” Suthar said. “These vaccines are still working very well at protecting against serious disease and death.”

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