2022 ends with looming risk of a new coronavirus variant, health experts warn
As the world enters
a new year, much public health and infectious disease experts predict that
monitoring for new coronavirus variants will be an increasingly important part
of Covid-19 mitigation efforts – and some are turning their attention to a
surge in cases in China.
Subvariants of the
Omicron coronavirus variant continue to circulate globally, and “we’re seeing
Omicron do what viruses do, which is it picks up mutations along the way that
helps it evade a little bit of immunity that’s induced by previous infection or
vaccination,” said Andrew Pekosz, a microbiologist and immunologist at
the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore.
“We haven’t seen any
major jumps in terms of Omicron evolution in some time,” he said. But “it’s
getting to that stage where it’s something that we have to continue to
monitor.”
In the United
States, the Omicron subvariants BQ.1.1, BQ.1, XBB, BA.5, BF.7 and BN.1 are
causing almost all Covid-19 infections, according to data from the US
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Omicron’s offshoots
appear to dominate globally as well, but as the coronavirus continues to spread
– especially in China after Beijing’s rapid easing of restrictions – there is
now concern about where Covid-19 trends could be heading in 2023 and the risk
of new variants emerging.
“It is a worry,”
said Dr William Schaffner, a professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases
at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville and medical director
of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases. “And that, of course,
has led to the CDC’s very recent announcement that they are going to oblige
people who come to this country from China to be tested and test negative
before they can come into the country.”
US health officials
announced Wednesday that, starting January 5, travellers from China will be
required to show a negative Covid-19 test result before flying to the country.
Passengers travelling to the US from China will need to get tested no more than
two days before flying and present proof of the negative test to their airline
before boarding.
Officials also
announced that the CDC is expanding the traveller-based Genomic Surveillance
Program to airports in Seattle and Los Angeles, bringing the total number of
airports participating to seven with about 500 weekly flights from at least 30
countries covered, including about 290 weekly flights from China and
surrounding areas.
The Chinese
government has not been sharing a lot of information about the genetic composition
of the viruses that it’s seeing there, Schaffner said.
“Because the Chinese
government was not doing that, that was the main reason CDC put this new travel
requirement in place. It’s certainly not to prevent simple transmission of
Covid from China here. We’ve got plenty of Covid. That would be like telling
people not to pour a bucket of water into a swimming pool,” he said. “This
travel testing requirement is a way to buy us some time and help create
somewhat of a buffer between ourselves and China, should a new variant suddenly
appear in that country.”
He added that the US
will need “as much time as possible” to update vaccines and antivirals to
respond to a potential emerging variant of concern.
The US testing
requirements for travellers will “buy some time,” but they won’t prevent new
Covid-19 cases from coming to the United States or new variants from emerging,
said Dr Carlos Del Rio, the executive associate dean for the Emory School of
Medicine and Grady Health System in Atlanta.
“I don’t think we’re
going to see much benefit, honestly,” he said of the travel requirements. “The
most important thing we need right now is, we need the Chinese to have more
transparency and tell us exactly what’s going on, and that is pretty much a
diplomatic decision. This is about diplomacy.”
In terms of the
genetic data on coronaviruses in China that is accessible to the public, “It
really is a bit of a black hole,” Pekosz said. Almost 250 million people
in China may have caught Covid-19 in the first 20 days of December,
according to an internal estimate from the nation’s top health officials,
Bloomberg News and the Financial Times reported last week.
“To me, what’s
really a concern is the ongoing infections and whether they’re producing more
variants in China that might be of particular concern for us, and testing
people before they get on a plane won’t answer that question,” Pekosz said.
“What we really need
is to do a much better job of sequencing the viruses from individuals who are
travelling from China so that we can aid in terms of understanding what kinds of
variants are circulating there,” he said, adding that throughout the pandemic,
Chinese officials have not been very transparent about their data on variants.
The constant spread of a
virus is what can lead to the emergence of variants. The more a virus spreads,
the more it mutates.
“For a variant to
emerge – and this is true not only for Covid but for influenza and for a lot
of other viruses – the most critical thing is, the more cases that you have,
the more likely that the virus will start to accumulate mutations that might
have the ability to evade immunity more effectively or to transmit more
effectively,” Pekosz said.
“So when you have a
situation like what’s starting to turn out in China, where you’re going to have
millions upon millions of infections, every one of those infections is just one
additional opportunity for the virus to pick up a random mutation that might
make it better at infecting people,” he said. “Combine that with the fact that
the Chinese population has been using less-than-optimal vaccines and has
apparently not been as good about putting boosters into their population as
other countries have, that means that there’s probably a lower amount of
immunity in the population.”
Health authorities
in China have “noticeably increased” the number of coronavirus genome sequences
and other related data they are submitting to the global database GISAID,
an initiative that maintains databases for scientists around the world to share
data on flu viruses and coronaviruses.
But many experts
argue that it’s not enough.
GISAID said in an
email to CNN on Wednesday that China’s Center for Disease Control and
Prevention, and several regional centres in the country, “have noticeably
increased the number of submissions of genome sequence and associated metadata
from samples taken in recent days.”
The GISAID Data
Science Initiative announced that it has released genome sequence data from 167
SARS-CoV-2 samples collected during the current outbreak in China. SARS-CoV-2
is the name of the virus that causes Covid-19. GISAID also confirmed that the
sequences from China “all closely resemble known globally circulating variants
seen in different parts of the world between July and December 2022,” compared
with the 14.4 million genomes in GISAID’s database.
“These latest data
provide a snapshot of the evolution of the Omicron variants and shows that these
most recently shared sequences from China are closely related to variants that
have been circulating for some time,” according to the GISAID Data Science
Initiative.
Covid-19 is in a
relatively “stable” state right now in the United States, but the nation still
sees about 350 deaths related to the disease each day, said Dr Jessica
Justman, an associate professor of medicine in epidemiology at Columbia
University Mailman School of Public Health and senior technical director
of the global health program ICAP.
While Covid-19
levels remain far below those of prior surges, trends are on the rise in parts
of the US, new hospital admissions have jumped nearly 50% over the past month,
and there is growing concerned that case numbers could soar after the winter
holidays.
To reduce the risk
of increased Covid-19 spread, Justman said, it will be important for people in
the new year to continue to stay up-to-date with their Covid-19 vaccinations.
Only 14.6% of the US
population ages 5 and older have gotten their updated booster shot, according
to CDC data.
“So where are we
going? That does take me to China,” Justman said.
“I’m concerned that China right now is one
giant incubator of SARS-CoV-2. There is the potential to have so many
infections and with that, new variants,” she said.
“I think we’re going
to be looking at new variants of concern” in 2023, Justman said. “The question
is: Will we go back to a point where we have a variant of concern that causes
such severe illness that we don’t get the benefit of our protection from prior
infections and from prior vaccinations? … I’m going to be optimistic and say I
don’t think we’re going to go back to that point.”
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