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Asian Reporter web extra, January 30, 2022
Explainer: What’s known about "stealth"
version of omicron?
By Laura Ungar
The Associated Press
Scientists and health officials around the world are keeping
their eyes on a descendant of the omicron variant that has been
found in more than 50 countries, including the United States.
This version of the coronavirus, which scientists call BA.2,
is widely considered stealthier than the original version of
omicron because particular genetic traits make it somewhat
harder to detect. Danish scientists reported this week that
preliminary information suggests it may be 1 1/2 times more
contagious than the original variant.
But scientists say there’s a lot they still don’t know about
it, including whether it causes more severe disease.
Where has it spread?
More than 18,000 genetic sequences of BA.2 have been uploaded
to GISAID, a global platform for sharing coronavirus data,
according to data collected by Scripps Research labs. The strain
has been detected in at least 54 countries and 24 U.S. states.
"Thus far, we haven’t seen it start to gain ground" in the
U.S., said Dr. Wesley Long, a pathologist at Houston Methodist
in Texas, which identified three cases as of earlier this week.
The mutant appears much more common in Asia and Europe. In
Denmark, it has spread quickly and become the dominant variant,
according to State Serum Institute, which falls under the Danish
Ministry of Health.
"Preliminary calculations indicate that BA.2 is one and a
half times more contagious than BA.1," the original omicron, the
institute’s Dr. Tyra Grove Krause said in a press release
earlier this week. If it is more contagious, "it may mean that
the wave of infections will be higher and will extend further
into February compared to the previous projections."
What’s known about this version of the virus?
BA.2 has lots of mutations. About 20 of them in the spike
protein that studs the outside of the virus are shared with the
original omicron. But it also has additional genetic changes not
seen in the initial version.
It’s unclear how significant those mutations are, especially
in a population that has encountered the original omicron, said
Dr. Jeremy Luban, a virologist at the University of
Massachusetts Medical School.
For now, the original omicron BA.1 and its descendant BA.2
are considered subsets of omicron. But global health leaders
could give it its own Greek letter name if it is deemed a
globally significant "variant of concern."
Scientists at the U.K. Health Security Agency found that
vaccine effectiveness against symptomatic disease appears
similar for BA.1 and BA.2. Looking at all vaccine brands
combined, scientists found they were about 70% effective against
symptomatic disease from BA.2 two or more weeks after a booster
shot.
An initial analysis by scientists in Denmark shows no
differences in hospitalizations for BA.2 compared with the
original omicron. They are also looking into how well current
vaccines work against it. It’s also unclear how well treatments
will work against it.
Doctors also don’t yet know for sure if someone who’s already
had COVID-19 caused by omicron can be sickened again by BA.2.
But they’re hopeful, especially that a prior omicron infection
might lessen the severity if that happens.
The two versions of omicron have enough in common that it’s
possible that infection with the original mutant "will give you
cross-protection against BA.2," said Dr. Daniel Kuritzkes, an
infectious diseases expert at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in
Boston.
Scientists will be conducting tests to see if antibodies from
an infection with the original omicron "are able to neutralize
BA.2 in the laboratory and then extrapolate from there," he
said.
How concerned are health agencies?
The World Health Organization (WHO) classifies omicron
overall as a variant of concern, its most serious designation of
a coronavirus mutant, but it doesn’t single out BA.2 with a
designation of its own. Given its rise in some countries,
however, the agency says investigations into its characteristics
"should be prioritized."
The U.K. agency, meanwhile, has designated BA.2 a "variant
under investigation," citing the rising numbers found in the
U.K. and internationally.
Why is it harder to detect?
The original version of omicron had specific genetic features
that allowed health officials to rapidly differentiate it from
delta using a certain PCR lab test because of what’s known as "S
gene target failure."
BA.2 doesn’t have this same genetic quirk. So on the test,
Long said, it looks like delta.
"It’s not that the test doesn’t detect it; it’s just that it
doesn’t look like omicron," he said.
What should you do to protect yourself?
Doctors advise the same precautions they have all along: Get
vaccinated and follow public health guidance about wearing
masks, avoiding crowds, and staying home when you’re sick.
"The vaccines are still providing good defense against severe
disease, hospitalization, and death," Long said.
The latest version is another reminder that the pandemic
hasn’t ended.
"We all wish that it was over," Long said, "but until we get
the world vaccinated, we’re going to be at risk of having new
variants emerge."
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives
support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of
Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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