What is known about the B.1.1.529 'Omicron' Covid-19 variant from South Africa?

Health
What is known about the B.1.1.529 'Omicron' Covid-19 variant from South Africa?

Experts from the World Health Organisation are meeting South African officials to assess the new B. 1.1.529 coronavirus variant from South Africa which has prompted the UK and other nations to impose a ban on flights from the region.

The variant has been labelled Omicron by the WHO, with the most concerning variants given names from the Greek alphabet.

What do we know so far about the Omicron Covid variant?
Of the 59 laboratory-confirmed cases of the new variant, three were in Botswana, two were in Hong Kong among people who had travelled from South Africa, and the rest were confirmed in South Africa.

The strain has an unusually large number of mutations and is “clearly very different” from previous variants, Tulio de Oliveira, a bioinformatics professor who runs gene-sequencing institutions at two South African universities, said on Thursday.

UK scientists first became aware of the new strain on November 23 after samples were uploaded on to a coronavirus strain tracking website from South Africa, Hong Kong and then Botswana.

Fifty-nine samples have been uploaded to the website so far.

“If we look at the results they had up to a week ago, less than 1 per cent of people were testing positive in lots of areas,” a senior scientist said.

“That's increased very dramatically in some parts to 6 per cent in the last few days, and so that makes me concerned quite rapidly about people who may be arriving [in the UK] now.”

How is Omicron different from the other Covid variants?
Despite being tracked for only the past three days, the virus has already been identified as having 30 different mutations.

That is twice as many as the Delta variant, which has become the most prominent variant in the UK over the past few months. The mutations contain features seen in all of the other variants but also traits that have not been seen before.

Richard Lessells from the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa told a media briefing the strain's mutations were concerning.

“They give us concern this virus might have enhanced transmissibility, enhanced ability to spread from person to person, and might also be able to get around parts of the immune system,” he said.

The mutations could make the variant more transmissible and allow it to evade the protection given by prior infection or vaccination.

It is also important to determine how infectious the new strain is.

The UK Alpha variant that emerged in late 2020 was 50 per cent more transmissible and raised the country's herd immunity threshold from 66 per cent to more than 80 per cent. The Delta variant raised the stakes even higher.

Has it been classed as a Covid 'variant of concern' in the UK?
UK scientists have not yet classified Omicron as a variant of concern as they say they do not have enough evidence on the variant's levels of transmissibility — but some have said they are worried.

“B. 1.1.529 has signatures of cumulative mutation indicating that it emerged in a chronic infection,” said Ravi Gupta, a professor of clinical microbiology at the University of Cambridge. “B. 1.1.529 does certainly look of significant concern based on mutations present.

“Many have been shown to impact binding by neutralising antibodies and some are known to increase the ability of virus to enter cells or to make them fuse together to allow cell-to-cell spread.”

Other Covid variants have given scientists a fright in the past but their concerns over B. 1.1.529 are greater.

“Beta was all immune escape and nothing else, Delta had infectivity and modest immune escape, this potentially has both to high degrees,” said Prof Gupta.

There have been many examples of variants that have seemed worrying on paper, but which came to nothing. The Beta variant was at the top of people's concerns at the beginning of the year because it was the best at escaping the immune system, but in the end, it was the faster-spreading Delta that became dominant in the world.

Neil Ferguson, a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, said: “The B. 1.1.529 variant has an unprecedented number of mutations in the spike protein gene, the protein which is the target of most vaccines.

“There is therefore a concern that this variant may have a greater potential to escape prior immunity than previous variants.

“However, we do not yet have reliable estimates of the extent to which B. 1.1.529 might be either more transmissible or more resistant to vaccines, so it is too early to be able to provide an evidence-based assessment of the risk it poses.”

It is currently classed as a “variant under monitoring”, meaning scientists believe it may pose a future risk, but its impact is unclear. Scientists in the UK are eager to acquire live virus cultures so it can be examined, but this takes time.

It can take seven to 10 days at least to grow enough virus that can be shared with other scientists so they can study how it mutates and changes.

Officials will now also have to wait for data to come from South Africa. The earliest they are expecting evidence to come through is two to three weeks, but it could be as long as four to six weeks.

Which countries have banned flights due to Omicron Covid variant?
Many countries have followed the UK by imposing travel restrictions on flights from southern Africa.

Planes from South Africa, Namibia, Lesotho, Botswana, Eswatini and Zimbabwe are no longer able to fly into Britain and all six countries have been added to its red list.


UK Transport Secretary Grant Shapps on Friday said the UK was resurrecting its red list for travel to “buy more time".

The EU said it is also planning to stop air travel from southern Africa. The 27-nation bloc is already battling a spike in cases.

Its member states are starting to take things into their own hands, however.

Covid-besieged Germany will only let in Germans flying from South Africa as of Friday night and, even if fully vaccinated, they will need to spend 14 days in hotel quarantine.

Italy and France have gone one step further than the UK by placing Mozambique on their red lists too. The Czech Republic will ban those who have spent more than 12 hours in the southern African nations as of Saturday.

Aside from Europe, Singapore and Israel have also imposed flights bans.

Watch: scientists raise concerns over Omicron Covid variant

Source: www.thenationalnews.com
Share This News On: