Houston Chronicle Sunday

Omicron’s spread blamed partly on ease of infection

- By Jon Healey and Ada Tseng

The omicron variant arrived in the U.S. right around Thanksgivi­ng. Less than a month later, it’s the country’s dominant coronaviru­s strain, accounting for 73 percent of new infections earlier this month, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

How did that happen? Infectious disease experts say there are two key factors that determine how quickly a virus will spread: how easily it is transmitte­d and how well it eludes the body’s defenses.

Early research suggests omicron has advantages in both areas. But the data also suggests the variant’s higher rate of transmissi­on hasn’t led to more hospitaliz­ations or deaths.

Preliminar­y results from a Dec. 14 study led by Alejandro Balazs of the Ragon Institute in Cambridge, Mass., found that omicron was twice as infectious as the delta variant and four times more infectious than the original virus. That study, which has yet to be peer-reviewed, relied on a relatively small sample of 239 patients in and around Boston, so the results may not be representa­tive of omicron’s behavior in general.

Neverthele­ss, said Dr. David Pride, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California at San Diego, with so many unvaccinat­ed people out there, “it was just a matter of time before we’d see a mutated version of the virus that is just better at infecting vaccinated people.”

It’s practicall­y an evolutiona­ry imperative, said Jasmine Plummer, a research scientist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles who was part of the team that discovered the epsilon variant of the virus last winter.

“Variants arise because of viruses trying to survive,” Plummer said. “All viruses evolve to evade their host. So we knew an omicron was coming.”

Rapid replicatio­n

One secret of omicron’s success appears to be its ability to replicate rapidly. Researcher­s from the University of Hong Kong reported that compared with delta, omicron “infects and multiplies 70 times faster” in the bronchus, the main airways into the lungs. Its advantage over the original virus is even greater, they added. The difference was apparent a mere 24 hours after infection.

If that’s indeed the case, it means that people infected by the omicron variant have a lot more virus in their throats waiting to be expelled into the air when they exhale — and especially when they cough or sneeze. It also suggests that they may be infectious sooner, which also would speed the spread of the disease.

One potentiall­y helpful sign from the Hong Kong research: Omicron moved more slowly from the throat into the lungs. In experiment­s, the scientists found the new strain replicated in the lungs at less than onetenth the rate of the original virus. That “may suggest lower severity of disease,” according to the university.

Pride said omicron is spreading more easily within households, suggesting the virus gets spewed into the air more easily. Another possibilit­y is that a smaller amount of omicron is required to cause an infection, he said.

There’s a lot we still don’t know about how omicron is transmitte­d, but the CDC expects that “anyone with omicron infection can spread the virus to others, even if they are vaccinated or don’t have symptoms.”

Pride put it another way: “We know this disease spreads via people, thus the only way to be pretty sure you’re not going to get it is to not be around people.”

The spike protein

The coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19 employs a spike-shaped protein on its surface to penetrate healthy cells and use them to churn out copies of itself. The vaccines available in the U.S. prompt the creation of antibodies that recognize that spike protein and target it for destructio­n by the body’s immune system.

Omicron has an unpreceden­ted number of mutations that affect the spike. About three dozen were tallied by Balazs and his team, and their location suggests they make it more difficult for antibodies to recognize an omicron virus particle. That’s true regardless of whether the antibodies were generated by a vaccine or a previous infection, they wrote.

Researcher­s at the University of British Columbia in Canada examined the omicron proteins affected by those mutations on a molecular level. They found that, on balance, the changes enabled the spike protein to bond more strongly to human cells than the original coronaviru­s could.

Sriram Subramania­m, the senior author of that study, said that even small changes in the spike protein “have potentiall­y big implicatio­ns for how the virus is transmitte­d, how our body fights it off and the effectiven­ess of treatments.”

He added: “Our experiment­s confirm what we’re seeing in the real world: that the omicron spike protein is far better than other variants at … evading the immunity produced by both vaccines and natural infection.”

Subramania­m said it was notable that the immunity generated by vaccines was more effective against omicron than the immunity from a previous infection in unvaccinat­ed patients. It’s another sign “that vaccinatio­n remains our best defense against the omicron variant,” he said.

But that defense may not be very effective without a booster.

Balazs’ study found that the protection afforded by vaccines or a previous coronaviru­s infection was “dramatical­ly decreased” against omicron. The one exception was in people who’d recently received a booster dose of the vaccine; they “exhibited potent neutraliza­tion of omicron,” according to the study.

That may help to explain why “breakthrou­gh” cases and reinfectio­ns appear to be rising rapidly. On Dec. 2, a South African research team reported more than 35,000 COVID-19 reinfectio­ns among the 2.8 million people who’d tested positive over the previous three months.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times ?? A worker uses a pole with a clamp to hand out COVID-19 test kits at a drive-thru site last week in Riverside, Calif. Early results from one study found the omicron variant was twice as infectious as the delta variant.
Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times A worker uses a pole with a clamp to hand out COVID-19 test kits at a drive-thru site last week in Riverside, Calif. Early results from one study found the omicron variant was twice as infectious as the delta variant.

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