Marin Independent Journal

Experts react to potentiall­y more contagious variant of the virus

- By Rong- Gong Lin II, Luke Money, Lyndsay Winkley, Paul Sisson

How concerned should California be about the new, potentiall­y more contagious variant of the coronaviru­s discovered here?

The variant caused deep concerns in Europe after it was discovered in England just before Christmas. The first reported U.S. case of COVID-19 caused by the variant was detected in Colorado. Although the developmen­t is cause for concern, some say it’s not necessaril­y cause for alarm. Here is what we know: Experts, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, say the variant is no surprise, but they also say the new strain could change the way the virus behaves.

“I don’t think that California­ns should feel that this is something odd,” Fauci said. “This is something that’s expected.”

Mutations in the coronaviru­s are not unanticipa­ted, he said, considerin­g that “the more you replicate, the more you mutate. So, when you have a lot of virus that’s circulatin­g in the community, it means it’s infecting a lot of people; it’s replicatin­g a lot.”

The “overwhelmi­ng majority of mutations are irrelevant,” he continued, but “every once in a while, you get a mutation that does impact a function of the virus.”

“It appears,” he added, “from what we’ve learned from the U.K. and what we’ll prove here, that this particular mutation does in fact make the virus better

at transmitti­ng from one person to another.”

Some scientists, however, are more skeptical that genetic changes in the strain, known as B.1.1.7, make it more contagious. There are other possible explanatio­ns for the variant’s rapid spread in England, such as its transmissi­on through dense communitie­s and among people who are less likely to wear masks and socially distance.

Either way, “there’s no indication at all that it increases the virulence … the ability to make you sick or kill you,” Fauci said of the variant, adding that it appears existing vaccines also remain effective.

When England was grappling with this, some experts told The Times they did not think it would be a problem in terms of vaccinatio­ns. Dr. Arturo Casadevall, a Johns Hopkins University microbiolo­gist, said that if the genetic changes were to have any effect on COVID-19 vaccines, it would be minimal.

“I am not alarmist about this,” Casadevall said.

Even changes that significan­tly alter the virus’ spike protein don’t affect plenty of other targets, called epitopes, that antibodies use to recognize and kill virus, he said.

“So for the virus to completely defeat [a] vaccine, it would have to change in many, many places where the virus binds to cells,” he said. “And that is a very low probabilit­y event.”

California patient hadn’t traveled overseasHe is a San Diego man in his 30s.

Dr. Eric McDonald, medical director of San Diego County’s epidemiolo­gy department, said the man reported no overseas travel before getting sick, and neither has one of the two Colorado patients. Travel history was not yet available for the second person there.

Absent evidence of travel, it would appear that those with confirmed infections picked up the virus in their communitie­s, strongly suggesting the U.K. strain is more widespread that first believed.

“There are other cases in San Diego we need to be aware of,” McDonald said.

The San Diego subject appears to have been heeding the current stayat-home order.

“Going back two weeks, the number of activities was also very limited,” McDonald said. “There was no work activity, and there was no specific gathering ... that we’ve talked about being the potential for a community outbreak.”

Because he had no travel history, “we believe this is not an isolated case in San Diego County,” Supervisor Nathan Fletcher said during a news conference Wednesday.

“While it’s been pointed out that there is not yet evidence that the strain has any more severe symptoms,” Fletcher said, “there is significan­t evidence that it does spread considerab­ly faster, that it is much more contagious.”

That’s all the more reason, he added, why county officials “continue to encourage the public and plead with the public to please ... especially over the next 72 hours and the New Year’s holiday, to please follow the public health order.”

More powerful strain suspectedO­fficials have suspected the huge spread in this region might suggest a more powerful strain.

But that has not been detected yet.

Officials have yet to find any evidence of the variant in Los Angeles County, where the coronaviru­s is already hitting particular­ly hard, according to Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer.

 ?? COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO VIA AP ?? Dr. Kristian Andersen, among others, announces that California’s first detected case of the new and apparently more contagious variant of the coronaviru­s was found in a San Diego man.
COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO VIA AP Dr. Kristian Andersen, among others, announces that California’s first detected case of the new and apparently more contagious variant of the coronaviru­s was found in a San Diego man.

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