‘Son’ of COVID-19 Delta Variant on Scientists’ Radar
The UK Health Security Agency says that as of September 27, about 6% of sequencing tests in the UK tested positive for the Delta descendant—AY.4.2—which some scientists estimate may be 10% more infectious than original Delta.
There’s no cause for alarm just yet, but there is cause for concern. A subtype of the Delta variant of COVID-19—AY.4.2—which might be about 10% more infectious than the original Delta is contained mostly in the UK, for now. It’s uncertain how much more it can spread there, but it is spreading.
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Francois Balloux, PhD, director at the University College London Genetics Institute, said on
Scott Gottlieb, MD, the former head of the Food and Drug Administration, said on
Gottlieb called for a robust system to identify and characterize new variants. “This needs to be a coordinated, global priority for COVID same as similar international efforts have become standard practice in influenza,” he Tweeted.
Viruses mutate all the time. That’s what viruses do. So far,
Jeffrey Barrett, DPhil, the medical genomics group leader at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, a not-for-profit genomics and genetics research institute,
AY.4.2 certainly concerns Kevin Kavanagh, MD, a member of Infection Control Today®’s Editorial Advisory Board. “There is no doubt that while we celebrate and throw caution to the wind, with Delta infections rapidly decreasing in many areas of the United States, quietly and unseen SARS-CoV-2 is desperately trying to mutate in order to wreak further havoc,” says Kavanagh. “It is like watching a science fiction horror movie. I cannot tell you how it is going to end.”
Barrett seems to agree, Tweeting that the appearance of AY.4.2 “suggests the virus still has evolutionary paths to higher transmissibility open to it, and there are millions of Delta cases around the world without much sequencing coverage.”
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