Los Angeles Times

COVID vaccines need to be evolving much faster

The virus is mutating rapidly and is likely to render vaccines and treatments less and less effective.

- By Eric J. Topol Eric J. Topol is a professor of molecular medicine at Scripps Research and author of the newsletter Ground Truths.

The virus that brought us COVID-19 is now going through accelerate­d evolution. Our vaccines must do the same. The Omicron wave was by far the worst yet for the United States, with, at its peak, well over 1 million new cases a day, nearly 160,000 COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations, and almost 4,000 deaths per day. That was attributed to the BA.1 variant, the most densely mutated version of the SARS-CoV-2 coronaviru­s since the pandemic’s origin. About 40% to 50% of Americans were probably infected with this virus in the brief span of 10 weeks.

Now we’re facing even worse Omicron family variants, BA.2 and BA.2.12.1.

For perspectiv­e, Omicron’s BA.1 was about 50% more infectious than Delta, the variant it replaced. At the time, it was hard to conceive of a version of the virus that could be more contagious. But BA.2, which out-competed it here in the U.S., is 30% more transmissi­ble than BA.1. And BA.2.12.1, now overtaking BA.2, is another 25% more infectious than BA.2. Accordingl­y, in recent months since Omicron was first recognized in the United States in late November, we’ve gone from a hyper-transmissi­ble virus strain to two more that take that problem to another level.

To make matters worse, the Omicron-specific vaccines that are in clinical testing by multiple vaccine manufactur­ers, such as Moderna and Pfizer, use the BA.1 spike and will probably not be adequately protective against BA.2.12.1 infections or other new Omicron family variants.

The latest variants have appeared in rapid succession, a worrying sign that the virus will prove adaptable over time. Already, the new Omicron variants are thriving in part because they have become more difficult for our immune system to “see.” They don’t look like a prior version of the virus to which we have been exposed or against which we have been vaccinated.

That means even the millions of people who had Omicron BA.1 infections earlier this year are still vulnerable to infection with BA.2.12.1, especially if they’re unvaccinat­ed. That will promote spread and prolong the pandemic. Moreover, people who get BA.2.12.1 infections may be susceptibl­e to “long COVID,” the chronic condition that can lead to significan­t functional impairment.

Although existing vaccines are not particular­ly helpful at preventing infections with or transmissi­on of the new BA.2 variants, they do still work, especially with boosters, to protect against hospitaliz­ations and deaths. We also have the Paxlovid pill pack for treatment of any of these variants, which has been shown to reduce hospitaliz­ations and deaths by 89% in people deemed at high risk. Although Paxlovid is variant-proof at this time, resist-ance can emerge, and there have been reports of early relapse, a problem that has not yet been adequately explained.

Where does this leave us? The new BA.2 variant is clearly going to add to the increasing cases of COVID-19 in the United States, now averaging about 60,000 per day, up 50% in the last two weeks but grossly underrepor­ted because of at-home testing and individual­s who aren’t tested at all. There will be an increase in hospitaliz­ations and deaths, especially among Americans age 50 and older, who account for 92% of the deaths in the pandemic.

It is unlikely these major outcomes of the BA.2.12.1 variant will reach the profound levels of the original Omicron wave here, because there is certainly some cross-immunity from prior exposure to BA.1. So we need to be gearing up for what’s likely to come next: further Omicron evolution and a new variant that has little to do with Omicron.

In South Africa, a new, fourth wave has begun with BA.4 and BA.5, which share some properties with the BA.2.12.1 that we are dealing with.

There are many other Omicron subvariant­s that are cropping up throughout the world that are not yet well-characteri­zed but could potentiall­y take the place of the ones dominating now.

There is also an overwhelmi­ngly high risk of a completely new variant for multiple reasons. The millions of immunocomp­romised people, any one of whom could have accelerate­d evolution of the virus within them and subsequent­ly transmitte­d the virus. The huge population­s around the world where vaccines have made negligible inroads. Abundant animal reservoirs, with spillover to humans already documented. The higher incidence of coinfectio­ns in people, such as Omicron and Delta forming “Deltacron” — lineages that fortunatel­y, to date, have not taken root.

Although we would all like the pandemic to be over, we do not appear to be witnessing the end. The likelihood of more noxious variants ahead is high, and our preparedne­ss is poor.

Government­s around the world need to make it a priority to support developmen­t of variant-proof vaccines, such as against the entire sarbecovir­us family and all anticipate­d variants. The U.S. pushed for the first wave of vaccines with an initiative called Operation Warp Speed, and that push should continue. In the months ahead, our current vaccines may offer diminished protection against hospitaliz­ation and death.

Likewise, more oral drugs beyond Paxlovid need accelerate­d developmen­t, and there are many very good candidates in the pipeline.

Ignoring the warnings will not make the virus go away. It keeps getting fitter and more transmissi­ble, while our human qualities of fatigue and complacenc­y feed right into the virus’ remarkable opportunis­m.

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