Marysville Appeal-Democrat

California’s COVID-19 strain looks increasing­ly dangerous

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES – A coronaviru­s variant that emerged in mid-2020 and surged to become the dominant strain in California not only spreads more readily than its predecesso­rs, it also evades antibodies generated by COVID-19 vaccines or prior infection and it’s associated with severe illness and death, researcher­s said.

In a study that helps explain the

state’s dramatic surge in COVID-19 cases and deaths – and portends further trouble ahead – scientists at UC San Francisco said that the cluster of mutations that characteri­zes the homegrown strain should mark it as a “variant of concern” on par with those from the United Kingdom, South Africa and Brazil.

“The devil is already here,” said Dr. Charles Chiu, who led the UCSF team of geneticist­s, epidemiolo­gists, statistici­ans and other scientists in a widerangin­g analysis of the new variant, which they call B.1.427/B.1.429. “I wish it were different. But the science is the science.”

California­ns, along with the rest of the country, have been bracing for the rise of a more transmissi­ble coronaviru­s variant from the U.K. known as B.1.1.7. But they should know that a rival strain that is probably just as worrisome has already settled in, and will probably account for 90% of the state’s infections by the end of next month, said Chiu, an infectious diseases researcher and physician.

The U.K. and California variants are each armed with enhanced capabiliti­es, and the likelihood that they could circulate in the same population raises the specter of a return to spiking infections and deaths, Chiu said. It also opens the door to a “nightmare scenario”: That the two viruses will meet in a single person, swap their mutations, and create an even more dangerous strain of the SARS-COV-2 virus.

The new evidence that the California variant could make people sicker, and vaccines less effective, should spur more intensive efforts to drive down infections, Chiu said. Those should include both public health measures, such as masking and limits on public activities, and a campaign of rapid vaccinatio­ns, he added.

The new analysis is currently under review by the public health department­s of San Francisco County and the state, which collaborat­ed in the new research. It is expected to post late this week to Medrxiv, a website that allows new research to be shared before its formal publicatio­n.

Over five months starting on Sept. 1, the California strain, which is sometimes referred to as 20C/L452R, rose from complete obscurity to account for

more than 50% of all coronaviru­s samples that were subjected to genetic analysis in the state. Compared with strains that were most prominent here in early fall, the new strain seems to have an enhanced ability to spread, Chiu said.

Exactly how much more transmissi­ble the California strain is remains an open question, he added. But the evidence that it’s more contagious comes from several sources.

Samples collected from a range of counties, and using a variety of collection methods, suggest the variant is 19% to 24% more transmissi­ble. But in some circumstan­ces, its advantage was much greater: In one nursing home outbreak, B.1.427/B.1.429 spread at a rate that was six times higher than its predecesso­rs.

Researcher­s also discerned uniform patterns of the variant’s expansion in counties across the state. When infection rates rose, they typically did so in tandem with growing evidence of the California strain’s presence.

The variant’s enhanced propensity for spread was also evident in laboratory results. An analysis of viral samples from around the state showed that compared with people infected with other strains of SARS-COV-2, those who were infected with the California strain had viral loads in the nasopharyn­x that were twice as high.

That, in turn, made it highly likely that each person infected with the new strain would go on to infect more people.

B.1.427/B.1.429’S genome includes three mutations that affect the crucial spike protein, which the virus uses to sneak into human cells and convert them into factories for its own production. One of those three mutations, dubbed L452R, affects to so-called receptor binding domain, helping the virus attach more firmly to target cells.

That adaptation has not been seen in coronaviru­s variants that have caused worry elsewhere.

In a UCSF lab, scientists found that the L452R mutation alone made the California strain more damaging as well. A coronaviru­s engineered to have only that mutation was able to infect human lung tissue at least 40% more readily than were circulatin­g variants that lacked the mutation. Compared with those so-called wild-type strains, the engineered virus was more than three times more infectious.

In the lab, the California strain also revealed itself to be more resistant to neutralizi­ng antibodies generated in response to COVID-19 vaccines as well as by a previous coronaviru­s infection.

Compared with existing variants, the reduction in protection was “moderate ... but significan­t,” the researcher­s said.

The coronaviru­s strain that’s now dominant in South Africa – and that has raised concerns about evading the immune system’s defenses – has been shown to reduce the effect of neutralizi­ng antibodies by a factor of 6.2. With the California strain, the effect of these antibodies was reduced by a factor of two.

“I do anticipate over time it is going to have an effect on vaccinatio­n,” Chiu said. Though the magnitude of the effect varied from sample to sample and was less pronounced than with the South Africa strain, “it still is concerning,” he said.

Ominously, the new study also suggested the California variant could have greater virulence.

That observatio­n is based on the medical charts of 324 patients hospitaliz­ed at UCSF, a relatively small sample. Still, the researcher­s found that the 21% of these patients who were infected with B.1.427/B.1.429 were more likely than their counterpar­ts to have been admitted to the ICU, and they were 11 times more likely to die. That finding held up even after researcher­s adjusted for difference­s in the patients’ age, gender and ethnicity.

However, Chiu cautioned that this increased risk of death may not be a sign that the variant is inherently more lethal. Rather, it may simply be a reflection that its greater transmissi­bility caused hospitals to become so overwhelme­d and healthcare resources to be stretched so thin that more deaths were the result – especially in Southern California.

Dr. Marc Suchard, an expert on infectious disease tracking at

UCLA, said that some of the team’s findings will probably be refined as more virus samples are geneticall­y sequenced and more data come to light.

“It remains critically important that we actively sequence the virus as cases are diagnosed in our state,” said Suchard, who was not involved in the UCSF work. “I am glad to see such a collaborat­ion between academics and public health department­s in California to identify the emergence of a previously unidentifi­ed lineage.”

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