Los Angeles Times

XBB.1.5 a worry among health officials

This may be the most infectious Omicron subvariant yet. Here’s what experts say.

- By Luke Money and Rong-Gong Lin II

The latest Omicron subvariant — perhaps the most infectious yet — has gained a foothold in California, a potentiall­y problemati­c developmen­t given the possibilit­y of a post-holiday spike.

However, it’s unclear whether the circulatio­n of this latest strain, XBB.1.5, will alter the trajectory of the COVID-19 pandemic.

A slew of alphanumer­ically designated coronaviru­s subvariant­s, each more easily spread than the last, surfaced last year. Those emergent strains, while disruptive, did not come close to spawning the same sort of devastatio­n seen in earlier waves.

But much remains unknown about how — or if — XBB.1.5 may affect disease severity or whether generally waning immunity from vaccines or a previous brush with the coronaviru­s will leave the population more exposed to infection.

XBB.1.5 “is the most transmissi­ble subvariant that has been detected yet,” said Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, the World Health Organizati­on’s technical lead

on COVID-19.

“We are concerned about its growth advantage, in particular in some countries in Europe and in North America — particular­ly the Northeast part of the United States, where XBB.1.5 has rapidly replaced other circulatin­g variants,” she said during a news conference last week.

In the Northeast, where the subvariant is the dominant circulatin­g strain of the coronaviru­s, COVID-19-positive hospital admissions have risen in recent weeks and now surpass levels from last summer’s wave, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“New York — where the XBB.1.5 variant was first detected, and the U.S. bellwether for its growth — still shows signs of increasing hospitaliz­ations, particular­ly for those age 70+,” Dr. Eric Topol, director of the Scripps Research Translatio­nal Institute in La Jolla, tweeted Friday.

Topol said in a commentary published Sunday in the Washington Post that the emergence of XBB.1.5 shows that the coronaviru­s isn’t done with us.

It’s not clear whether XBB.1.5 is fueling a hospital rise. Several factors, including increased transmissi­on stemming from travel and gatherings over the winter holidays, are likely at play.

But given the subvariant’s growth advantage, officials say, the trend warrants a close examinatio­n.

“We can’t attribute the increase in hospitaliz­ations to XBB.1.5 yet, but we are working with U.S. CDC colleagues closely, and we have asked them for a detailed risk assessment of XBB.1.5 as well — just as we would with any country and any subvariant­s that are circulatin­g,” Van Kerkhove said. “We need to go deeper and look at the reasons for the increases in hospitaliz­ation and determine what is happening.”

Despite its growth elsewhere, XBB.1.5 is nowhere close to dominant in California. The state Department of Public Health estimates it accounts for about 7.8% of cases — the fourth-most-common subvariant circulatin­g in the Golden State.

However, the share of cases attributed to it has seemingly risen in recent weeks. In the region that includes California, Nevada, Arizona, Hawaii and the Pacific island territorie­s, an estimated 7.6% of coronaviru­s cases over the last week were thought to be XBB.1.5, up from 2.4% in the week leading up to Christmas, CDC data show.

Those projected proportion­s often change as more data become available — sometimes drasticall­y so. For instance, the CDC initially estimated that about 40.5% of coronaviru­s specimens circulatin­g nationwide last week were XBB.1.5, but that figure has since been revised to 18.3%.

According to the agency, “These projection­s can be uncertain or fluctuate within a wide predictive interval when a variant is just beginning to spread.”

Over the most recent week, the CDC estimates that XBB.1.5 accounts for 27.6% of new cases across the U.S., the second-highest share of any coronaviru­s strain.

XBB.1.5 is a descendant of XBB, which is a recombinan­t of descendant­s of the Omicron subvariant BA.2.

“Our concern is how transmissi­ble it is,” Van Kerkhove said. “It does have immune escape ... and the more this virus circulates, the more opportunit­ies it will have to change.”

In Los Angeles County, coronaviru­s cases remain high but have been declining since early December after a Thanksgivi­ng-fueled wave. But officials have warned about the possibilit­y of a second peak stemming from winter holiday gatherings and travel.

The L.A. County Department of Public Health is urging people returning to work or school from winter break to mask up in indoor public settings for at least 10 days. That span is the rough incubation period for the coronaviru­s — the time between when someone is exposed and when they might be contagious, even if they don’t develop symptoms.

Doing so could blunt the severity of a wave this month, officials said.

For the seven-day period that ended Tuesday, L.A. County recorded 2,058 cases a day. Per capita, that’s 143 cases a week for every 100,000 residents. A rate of 100 or more is considered high.

The latest case rate represents a 12% decrease from the prior week.

Hospitaliz­ations statewide have stabilized after an autumn rise. As of Monday, 4,159 coronaviru­s-positive patients were hospitaliz­ed in California, a 6% decrease from two weeks ago. That figure includes those hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 and a larger segment of patients who test positive after seeking care for other reasons.

Health officials also have expressed optimism about the lower numbers of COVID-19 deaths reported this fall and so far this winter. Authoritie­s in L.A. County attribute the trend to a variety of tools that weren’t available previously: an updated COVID-19 booster shot that’s a pretty good match to this winter’s circulatin­g strains; antiCOVID-19 pills such as Paxlovid and molnupirav­ir that reduce the risk of death; and increased use of masks, particular­ly in crowded or indoor settings.

Officials this season also haven’t had to deal with the late emergence of a dramatical­ly different variant, as they did with the initial version of Omicron in the autumn of 2021, which rapidly spread over the Thanksgivi­ng and winter holidays.

“We do expect further waves of infection around the world, but that doesn’t have to translate into further waves of death, because our countermea­sures continue to work,” Van Kerkhove said.

Still, COVID-19 remains a leading cause of death in the U.S. Since early October, about 36,000 COVID-19 deaths have been reported nationally, compared with an estimated 14,000 from the flu.

Weekly reported COVID19 deaths — which lag case rate trends — also are increasing again after a brief dip between Christmas and New Year’s Day. L.A. County reported 160 COVID-19 deaths for the week that ended Tuesday. That’s nearly quadruple the 43 recorded during the first week of November.

The 160 deaths are a peak for L.A. County this autumn and winter. However, they represent a fraction of the high from last winter, when 513 deaths were recorded the week that ended Feb. 9.

It’s possible that the temporary decrease in reported deaths resulted from data delays over the winter holidays.

Those at highest risk of death from COVID-19 are older people who are unvaccinat­ed and those who are not up to date on booster shots. Throughout December, residents of L.A. County age 50 and older had the highest rates of coronaviru­s cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths.

At the global level, the World Health Organizati­on “is following closely and assessing the risk of this subvariant and will report accordingl­y,” said DirectorGe­neral Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, referring to XBB.1.5.

“COVID-19 will no doubt still be a major topic of discussion, but I believe and hope that with the right efforts this will be the year the public health emergency officially ends,” he said.

‘Our concern is how transmissi­ble it is. It does have immune escape ... and the more this virus circulates, the more opportunit­ies it will have to change.’

— Maria Van Kerkhove, World Health Organizati­on

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