Increased infections, but not viral burden, with a new SARS-CoV-2 variant

<br><strong>Background </strong>A new variant of SARS-CoV-2, B.1.1.7/VOC202012/01, was identified in the UK in December-2020. Direct estimates of its potential to enhance transmission are limited. <br><strong> Methods </strong>Nose and throat swabs from 28-Septemb...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Walker, S, Vihta, K-D, Gethings, O, Pritchard, E, Jones, J, House, T, Bell, I, Bell, J, Newton, J, Farrar, J, Diamond, I, Studley, R, Rourke, E, Hay, J, Hopkins, S, Crook, D, Peto, T, Matthews, P, Eyre, D, Stoesser, N, Pouwels, K
Otros Autores: COVID-19 Infection Survey team
Formato: Journal article
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2021
Descripción
Sumario:<br><strong>Background </strong>A new variant of SARS-CoV-2, B.1.1.7/VOC202012/01, was identified in the UK in December-2020. Direct estimates of its potential to enhance transmission are limited. <br><strong> Methods </strong>Nose and throat swabs from 28-September-2020 to 2-January-2021 in the UK’s nationally representative surveillance study were tested by RT-PCR for three genes (N, S and ORF1ab). Those positive only on ORF1ab+N, S-gene target failures (SGTF), are compatible with B.1.1.7/VOC202012/01. We investigated cycle threshold (Ct) values (a proxy for viral load), percentage of positives, population positivity and growth rates in SGTF vs non-SGTF positives. <br><strong> Results </strong>15,166(0.98%) of 1,553,687 swabs were PCR-positive, 8,545(56%) with three genes detected and 3,531(23%) SGTF. SGTF comprised an increasing, and triple-gene positives a decreasing, percentage of infections from late-November in most UK regions/countries, e.g. from 15% to 38% to 81% over 1.5 months in London. SGTF Ct values correspondingly declined substantially to similar levels to triple-gene positives. Population-level SGTF positivity remained low (<0.25%) in all regions/countries until late-November, when marked increases with and without self-reported symptoms occurred in southern England (to 1.5-3%), despite stable rates of non-SGTF cases. SGTF positivity rates increased on average 6% more rapidly than rates of non-SGTF positives (95% CI 4-9%) supporting addition rather than replacement with B.1.1.7/VOC202012/01. Excess growth rates for SGTF vs non-SGTF positives were similar in those up to high school age (5% (1-8%)) and older individuals (6% (4-9%)). <br><strong> Conclusions </strong>Direct population-representative estimates show that the B.1.1.7/VOC202012/01 SARS-CoV-2 variant leads to higher infection rates, but does not seem particularly adapted to any age group.