China Daily Global Weekly

Doubts surface over US Omicron start

Highly-transmissi­ble COVID strain detected in NY wastewater days before S. Africa announceme­nt

- By BELINDA ROBINSON belindarob­inson@chinadaily­usa.com

The Omicron variant of the coronaviru­s was detected in New York City’s wastewater days before it was officially announced in South Africa and a week before the first case was confirmed in the United States, according to a report by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The findings from a CDC report in January showed that a resident of New York likely had the highly transmissi­ble Omicron variant four days before South Africa declared it of concern to the internatio­nal community on Nov 25. It also was found in the city’s wastewater 10 days before the US reported its first confirmed case of Omicron on Dec 1.

Wastewater data provides valuable informatio­n about the spread of the coronaviru­s because those who are infected shed it in their feces.

Scientists collect samples from wastewater, which are sent to a laboratory for sequencing to determine the levels of the virus in a community or city. They may see new mutations of the virus often before clinical diagnosis or cases are confirmed.

John Dennehy, a professor of biology at Queens College of the City University of New York, researches virus evolution, ecology and emerging viruses in new host population­s.

Dennehy told China Daily: “Monitoring SARS-CoV-2 is an effective means of determinin­g the level of COVID-19 circulatin­g in a city. In cities with sewers, everyone contribute­s to the wastewater, thus wastewater

provides an unbiased snapshot of SARS-CoV-2 prevalence. By contrast, estimating prevalence through positive PCR tests may miss infected individual­s who do not see medical attention or test at home.”

Since mid-2020, Dennehy has been a part of a team of scientists that have been monitoring New York City’s wastewater each week for levels of the coronaviru­s.

On Nov 21, the team collected a sample from the city’s wastewater and sent it for sequencing to find viruses two days later.

In December, when the results came back, they “immediatel­y recognized”

a new variant’s distinct mutations as Omicron, just as it had become internatio­nal news.

“There was a gap between when we collected the wastewater sample and when we received the sequencing data,” Dennehy explained. “When we received the sequencing data, the Omicron variant had just appeared in the news, and we immediatel­y recognized Omicron’s presence in New York City.

“Although Omicron clearly arose in Africa, this finding suggests that there was community spread of Omicron at the time of sampling.”

The CDC’s study of Omicron in New

York’s wastewater does not provide concrete evidence that the variant was there before it was found elsewhere, and while the mutations were present, the variant was fragmented and may not have been all on the same genome, The New York Times reported.

However, in November, researcher­s in California and Texas found traces of the Omicron variant in local wastewater, suggesting it was present there too before it was widely known.

Alexandria Boehm, an environmen­tal engineer at Stanford University and an author of the CDC study, used PCR tests capable of detecting Omicron’s specific mutation.

She got hits for Omicron’s specific mutation from two samples collected in California, on Nov 25 in Merced and Nov 30 in Sacramento.

From December 2021, the US experience­d a surge in Omicron cases that sent people rushing out to buy PCR tests, which increased the strain on hospitals.

In January, the CDC estimated that 99.5 percent of all COVID-19 cases were from the Omicron variant. But it was deemed less likely than the Delta variant to cause serious illness.

On Feb 16, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said during a White House press briefing that Omicron cases were declining.

As of Feb 21, over 935,300 deaths in the US were caused by COVID-19, according to Johns Hopkins University, an average of 2,200 deaths a day.

Last year, shortly after South Africa announced that it had discovered the Omicron variant, the European Union, Israel, Singapore, Great Britain and the United States banned all travel from the nation.

Non-US citizens from eight neighborin­g African countries — Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia and Zimbabwe — also were banned from travel.

The travel ban came under fire from United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who described it as “travel apartheid”.

The US lifted its travel ban on Dec 24, after Omicron cases began surging at home and worldwide.

Now, as cases of Omicron wane in the US, the CDC said it still has several measures in place to monitor whether levels of the virus are rising or falling in communitie­s nationwide.

 ?? SANDY HUFFAKER / AFP ?? Revelers in the French Quarter watch a parade in New Orleans, in the US state of Louisiana, on Feb 20. The state will hold the 2022 French Quarter Festival in April after a two-year hiatus following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.
SANDY HUFFAKER / AFP Revelers in the French Quarter watch a parade in New Orleans, in the US state of Louisiana, on Feb 20. The state will hold the 2022 French Quarter Festival in April after a two-year hiatus following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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