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How Worried Should We Be About The New U.K. Coronavirus Variant?

The image depicts the coronavirus binding to a human cell. The variant identified in the United Kingdom has a mutation known to increase how tightly the virus binds to human cells.
Kateryna Kon
/
Science Photo Library via Getty Images
The image depicts the coronavirus binding to a human cell. The variant identified in the United Kingdom has a mutation known to increase how tightly the virus binds to human cells.

A new variant of the coronavirus is sweeping through England. At the same time, the country is reporting a record-high number of COVID-19 cases – nearly 40,000 on December 23 — as well as surges in hospitalizations and deaths. In London last week, an estimated 2 percent of people in private households tested positive for COVID-19, the Independent reports.

So the big question is: Are these events connected? Is the new variant causing this surge?

Now British scientists are starting to answer that question. And the take-home message is sobering. The new variant, which contains 17 mutations, appears more transmissible and harder to control in terms of spread.

"Given all the biological and epidemiological evidence that has come together in the past few weeks, I think the picture is getting more and more consistent with something pretty serious," says mathematical modeler Nick Davies, who led the study.

Davies is part of a group of scientists in the United Kingdom, called SPI-M, whose job is to use mathematical models to predict how diseases will spread in order to guide policymakers' decisions. ... [fill in the blank]

Last week, when health officials announced the rise of this new variant, Davies was skeptical that it was responsible for the surge in the U.K.: "Because one possible explanation for a rise in hospitalizations could just be that we've just come out of lockdown in these regions, and maybe people have gone back to more normal movement and contact."

And besides, all viruses mutate. That's normal. The vast majority of time the mutations are harmless. They don't make the virus more dangerous.

But then a few days later, Davies watched a news presentation from South Africa, and his skepticism evaporated. COVID-19 is also surging there. At the same time, scientists there have also detected a new variant, which shares surprisingly similarities with the U.K. variant. Both versions contain a mutation, called N501Y. This mutation has appeared in previous variants and is already \known to increase how tightly the virus binds to human cells.

And so Davies went to work. He took the data on the new U.K. variant and inserted it into computer models. He wanted to know why the new variant was spreading so quickly. He tested out four key hypotheses. Could the new variant:

  • Infect people who already had COVID?
  • Infect children more easily?
  • Spread more quickly than previous versions?
  • Be more transmissible? (That is, when a person catches the new variant, would they be likely to spread it to more people than when they're infected with other versions?)
  • The mathematical models,published online Wednesday but not yet peer reviewed, pointed in to one of these four hypotheses. "Increased transmissibility is the easiest way for us to explain what we're seeing," Davies says.

    Specifically, the study suggests the new variant is about 50 percent more transmissible than previous versions of SARS-Cov2. But the data can't yet rule out the possibility that the other factors also contribute to the new variant's domination in England. There's also no evidence that the variant causes more severe disease than previous versions.

    And scientists don't know why this variant is likely more transmissible. Previous studies, with another variant, suggest the U.K. variant may infect human cells more easily. And it may generate more copies of itself inside a person. "When you swab people who have coronavirus infection, the people who are infected with this new variant tend to have more copies of the virus on the swab," says Davies, who's also part of the London School of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

    No matter the underlying reason, policymakers should take this new variant very seriously, says epidemiologist Bill Hanage of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. If it's indeed 50 percent more transmissible, it will be difficult to stop its spread.

    "Given the assumptions in their models, it's really quite hard to avoid a situation very much like what happened last spring, in terms of hospital bed capacity and surges, without a very high rate of vaccination," Hanage says.

    That said, Hanage says there's no reason for people to panic or be scared. "It's not a magic virus," he says — that's how virologist Ian Mackay at the University of Queensland put it on Twitter.

    "We have actually come across a large number of ways that we can use to stop it. However, we need to redouble our efforts in that direction."

    The variant will likely come to the U.S. — if isn't here already. The study strongly suggests that people should be even more diligent about preventive measures: avoiding large gatherings. wearing masks, physical distancing and washing hands. On top of that, Hanage says, "the vaccine needs to be getting out at a very, very high rate."

    Because right now, scientists believe the vaccine will still be effective with this new variant. And, Hanage says, the quicker we immunize the vulnerable members of a community the safer the whole community will be from the original and future versions of the novel coronavirus.

    Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

    Tags
    Health Morning EditionCOVID-19 VaccineAll Things Considered
    Michaeleen Doucleff, PhD, is a correspondent for NPR's Science Desk. For nearly a decade, she has been reporting for the radio and the web for NPR's global health outlet, Goats and Soda. Doucleff focuses on disease outbreaks, cross-cultural parenting, and women and children's health.