Houston Chronicle Sunday

Mu variant isn’t a concern yet, but WHO is keeping tabs

- By Adela Suliman

A coronaviru­s variant known as “mu” or

“B.1.621” was designated by the World Health Organizati­on as a “variant of interest” earlier this week and will be monitored by the global health body as cases continue to emerge across parts of the world. It is the fifth variant of interest currently being monitored by the WHO. Q: Where was it first detected and where is it now?

A: The variant was first detected in Colombia in January 2021, where cases continue to rise. It has since been identified in more than 39 countries, according to the WHO, among them the United States, South Korea, Japan, Ecuador, Canada and parts of Europe.

Q: How widespread is mu in the United States?

A: About 2,000 mu cases have been identified in the United States, so far, according to the Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data, the largest database of novel coronaviru­s genome sequences in the world. Most cases have been recorded in California, Florida, Texas and New York among others.

However, mu is not an “immediate threat right now” within the United States, top infectious­disease expert Anthony Fauci told a press briefing on Thursday. He said that while the government was “keeping a very close eye on it,” the variant was “not at all even close to being dominant” as the delta variant remains the cause of over 99 percent of cases in the country.

Mu has yet to be designated a variant of interest or concern by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Q: Will my coronaviru­s vaccine work against mu?

A: It’s unclear how much protection the vaccines offer against this variant. “The mu variant has a constellat­ion of mutations that indicate potential properties of immune escape,” the WHO said in a statement Tuesday, raising concerns that it may be more resistant to coronaviru­s vaccines than other variants. “But this needs to be confirmed by further studies,” it added.

Fauci said that while laboratory data had shown that the mu variant can evade certain antibodies — among them those induced by vaccine shots — there is currently a lack of clinical data and other research involving people, showing this. He underscore­d that in general, vaccines remain effective and the best protection against the coronaviru­s.

Vaccine maker Pfizer told The Post in an email that it was studying the mu variant and expected to share data soon with a peer-reviewed journal.

Representa­tives from other coronaviru­s vaccine makers Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZenec­a have yet to reply to requests for comment.

Q: Is the mu variant more transmissi­ble?

A: Paúl Cárdenas, a professor of infectious diseases and genomics at Universida­d San Francisco de Quito in Ecuador, has studied mu and said that current evidence showed that it was likely “more transmissi­ble” than the original coronaviru­s strain. Mu has “been able to outcompete gamma and alpha in most parts of Ecuador and Colombia,” he said.

However, there was no sign yet that people should be more worried, Cárdenas added.

“People should know that these variants emerge all the time and it is important that they are characteri­zed in order to be tracked,” he said.

Q: What next?

A: Mu is the fifth “variant of interest” being monitored by the WHO. It has not yet been moved up to the WHO’s list of “variants of concern” which currently includes the delta variant ravaging the United States, along with the alpha, beta and gamma variants that are deemed more transmissi­ble or virulent by the public health body.

For now, the WHO says more studies are needed to understand the characteri­stics of the mu variant — and that it will monitor how it may interact, in particular, with the more common delta variant.

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