Covid's saga of new variants tells us that it's not going to go away

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lthough the World Health Organization in May declared that the Covid pandemic is no longer a public health emergency, newer variants continue to emerge and drive infections. ย 

While some of the newer variants are highly transmissible and are infecting more people, none have been as virulent as Omicron -- which first surfaced in November 2021. The new variants include the XBB, EG.5, BA.2.86, and FL.1.5.1.

The XBB variants of Omicron began circulating in the late summer of 2022. Its sublineage XBB.1.16 was in March 2023 designated a variant under monitoring (VUM), then upgraded as a Covid-19 "variant of interest" (VOI) due to its "sustained increase" and "growth advantage" reported from several countries in April by the WHO.

The variants led a significant uptick in cases, while also evading vaccine-induced immunity, both in India and several countries, including the US, the UK and others.

The WHO noted that XBB.1.16 had become one of the fastest growing variants. But research suggested that XBB1.16 did not appear to cause more severe illness, and it seemed to be responsive to current antiviral treatments.

EG5.1, which first appeared in April, was added to the list of VUM by the WHO in July. Nicknamed Eris, EG.5.1 showed additional mutants on the spike protein SF456L and SQ52H.

Its speed of transmission was found to be 45 per cent more than XBB.1.16. It has so far been identified in more than 50 countries worldwide.

In the US, the EG.5 variant is estimated to be the "dominant" strain because it makes up the largest share of new cases of Covid compared to other variants. On September 1, the US CDC estimates said it makes up for 21.5 per cent of new cases.

According to a recent study, published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases, EG.5 is spreading rapidly across the globe because of its ability to escape from antibodies.

Scientists from the German Primate Center-Leibniz Institute for Primate Research in Gottingen found that EG.5.1 is not more infectious than its predecessors, meaning it cannot infect host cells more effectively.

However, EG.5.1 can escape neutralising antibodies better than other currently circulating SARS-CoV-2 lineages, giving it an advantage in infecting individuals whose immune systems have produced neutralising antibodies after vaccination or infection.

In August, the WHO also flagged another sub-variant of Omicron BA.2.86, dubbed as Pirola. BA.2.86 was first detected in Israel and has spread to about 10 countries.

The variant has shown large mutations -- more than 30 in the spike protein -- similar to Omicron, increasing fears of fresh Covid cases. After just three cases, WHO declared it a VUM, and also called for closer monitoring of the variant to understand its spread and severity.

The UK Health Security Agency (HSA) last week had reported 34 cases of BA.2.86, 28 of which were reported from a single elderly care home in Norfolk -- an early indicator that the variant may be sufficiently transmissible to have impact in close contact settings.

"One possible scenario is that BA.2.86 is less transmissible than the current variants, and so never spreads widely," Dr Jesse Bloom, was quoted as saying to The New York Times.

"However, there is also a chance that the variant will spread widely -- and we will just have to wait for more data to know."

FL.1.5.1, dubbed "Fornax", is the next-largest strain at 14.5 per cent of US infections, the CDC estimated as of September 1.

FL.1.5.1 as well as EG.5 are XBB variant descendants that share a mutation known as F456L. This mutation appears to be helping them spread more than other virus siblings.

Amid all these variants, there is no evidence to suggest that infection with one of the emerging variants is associated with more severe disease or a reduction in vaccine effectiveness when compared to other currently circulating variants. But these suggest that Covid is here to stay.

"I see so many people say 'Remember, Covid's not over'," Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist and director at Brown University's Pandemic Center, told STAT.

"Covid is never going to be over. You need to set expectations accordingly. It is never going to be over."

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โœ”๏ธ Covid's saga of new variants tells us that it's not going to go away

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