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Two new Covid sub-variants are sparking global concern - what you need to know

BA.4 and BA.5 strains contain mutations evolved to target human lung cells, potentially making them more dangerous than other recent coronavirus sub-lineages

Joe Sommerlad
Wednesday 17 August 2022 04:08 EDT
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Related: US approves Covid-19 vaccines for infants

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Two new sub-variants of Covid-19 drove up infection rates in the UK between the start of June and mid-July before suddenly tailing off, nevertheless providing a timely reminder that the threat from the virus has not gone away.

Known as BA.4 and BA.5, the strains were discovered in South Africa in January and February respectively and are effectively the grandchildren of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus, which spread across the globe in late 2021, and feature three mutations to their spike proteins, which, it is feared, enable them to retrain their attack on human lung cells.

That means they have more in common with the earlier, more dangerous Alpha and Delta variants than the highly transmissible but milder Omicron, which targeted upper respiratory tract tissue.

Potentially, these mutations might also enable the sub-variants to sidestep antibodies from past infections or vaccination and therefore overcome immunity.

Preliminary data captured by Professor Kei Sato of the University of Tokyo in Japan appears to indicate as much, prompting the virologist to comment: “Altogether, our investigations suggest that the risk of [these] Omicron variants, particularly BA.4 and BA.5, to global health is potentially greater than that of original BA.2.”

Professor Sato’s experiments indicate that the variants replicate more efficiently in the lungs than Omicron, while further experiments in hamsters have suggested that BA.4 and BA.5 may bring more severe disease.

The World Health Organisation has also been investigating the two sub-variants since April to assess whether they are more infectious or dangerous than their predecessors and have since added them to its monitoring list.

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control in turn labelled BA.4 and BA.5 “variants of concerns” in May.

What first sparked particular alarm in the UK was the sharp rise in infections in the wake of four days of festivities honouring the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee from 2-5 June, which encouraged increased socialising and duly led to a 43 per cent rise in case numbers the following week.

That led to a spike in cases to 4.6m by the July heatwave, according to the Office for National Statistics, but thankfully those numbers have now fallen closer to 120,000.

While immunity is high in Britain, with 87.9 per cent of the population having had two vaccine doses and 69.1 per cent of people having received a booster jab, the public has largely behaved as though the pandemic never happened since the last of Boris Johnson’s government’s unpopular restrictions were repealed a month ahead of schedule on 24 February, abandoning face masks and distancing and returning to life as normal.

However, it is now more than eight months since the last major booster jab drive was mounted ahead of Christmas and the New Year and immunity could be beginning to wane, potentially leading to more patients needing professional care and perhaps even deaths, either now or later in the year when flu season descends.

“There’s a disconnect between the actuality of how infections are happening… and how people are deciding not to take very many precautions,” John Swartzberg, a professor emeritus of infectious diseases and vaccinology at the University of California-Berkeley’s School of Public Health, warned The Daily Beast, observing the UK situation and suggesting its conditions could easily be replicated across the Atlantic.

Should the equivalent sub-variant surge arrive in North America, moving from east to west as all previous Covid waves have done, the US will find itself much less well immunised, with just 67.3 per cent of the American public fully vaccinated and only 48.3 per cent having received a booster.

At present, BA.4 and BA.5 account for 5.3 per cent and 88.8 per cent of US cases respectively, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the first having been identified on American shores in New York in April.

The manner in which those proportions have shot up this summer provides another unwelcome reminder that the pandemic is far from over, however much we might wish it so.

How dangerous the new sub-variants finally prove to be, whether they can power passed antibodies and cause serious illness or whether our accumulated immunity will hold firm, remains to be seen.

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