Six persons in Indore district of Madhya Pradesh were found infected with AY.4, Chief medical and Health Officer (CMHO) of the state B S Saitya said.
Tag: Delta varient
-
Delta variant 40-60% more transmissible than Alpha: Top official
By Express News Service
NEW DELHI: A top government official has now said that the Delta variant of coronavirus is 40-60% more transmissible than the Alpha variant.NK Arora, co-chair of INSACOG, a government initiative for Covid genomic surveillance in India, however, added that it has not yet been conclusively established whether this variant, which first emerged in Maharashtra and has now reached over 80 countries, can cause more severe disease.
B.1.617.2, a variant of SARSCoV2 was first identified in October 2020 in India and was primarily responsible for the second wave in the country. It now accounts for over 80%t of new Covid cases.
ALSO READ: Delta variant largely responsible for infections during second Covid wave: ICMR study
This variant has mutations in its spike protein, which helps it bind to the ACE2 receptors present on the surface of the cells more firmly, making it more transmissible and capable of evading the body’s immunity.
“It is around 40-60% more transmissible than its predecessor (Alpha variant) and has already spread to more than 80 countries, including the UK, the USA, Singapore, and so on,” said Arora in a statement on Monday.
There have been studies that show on invading a human cell, this variant replicates faster which leads to a strong inflammatory response in organs like the lungs.
ALSO READ: Covaxin potent against beta, delta variants of coronavirus
“However, it is difficult to say that disease due to the Delta variant is more severe. The age profile and the deaths during the second wave in India were quite similar to that seen during the first wave,” Arora said.
On Delta Plus variant — AY.1 and AY.2 — whose 55-60 cases across 11 states, including Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, and Madhya Pradesh have been detected so far, Arora said that the variant is still being studied for its transmissibility, virulence, and vaccine escape characteristics.
ALSO READ: Delta 8 times less sensitive to vaccine antibodies
On the continued rise in cases in some states in India, including northeastern states and Kerala, the official said that most of these cases could be due to the Delta variant.
On future Covid waves in the country, Arora said that the cases may go up if a new, more infectious variant comes.
“Any future waves will be controlled and delayed if more and more people get vaccinated and most importantly, people follow Covid-appropriate behaviour effectively, especially till a substantial part of our population gets vaccinated,” he said.
-
Delta variant accounts for 80 per cent of new Covid cases: Government expert panel chief
By PTI
NEW DELHI: The Delta variant was primarily responsible for the second wave of COVID-19 in the country, accounting for over 80 per cent of new cases, Dr N K Arora, co-chair of Indian SARS-CoV-2 Genomics Consortium said, underlining that the cases may go up if a new, more infectious variant comes.The variant is also around 40-60 percent more transmissible than its predecessor, Alpha variant, and has already spread to more than 80 countries, including the UK, the US and Singapore.
ALSO READ: Delta variant largely responsible for infections during second Covid wave: ICMR study
The Delta Plus variant “AY.1 and AY.2” has so far been detected in 55-60 cases across 11 states, including Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, and Madhya Pradesh and is still being studied for its transmissibility, virulence, and vaccine escape characteristics, Dr Arora said, according to a Union Health Ministry statement.
The Delta variant has mutations in its spike protein, which helps it bind to the ACE2 receptors present on the surface of the cells more firmly, making it more transmissible and capable of evading the body’s immunity, Dr Arora said.
“The B.1.617.2, a variant of COVID-19 known as the Delta variant, was first identified in October 2020 in India, and was primarily responsible for the second wave in the country, today accounting for over 80 percent of new COVID-19 cases,” he said.
ALSO READ: Covaxin potent against beta, delta variants of coronavirus
It emerged in Maharashtra and travelled northwards along the western states of the country before entering the central and the eastern states.
On whether it causes more severe disease as compared to other variants, Dr Arora said there are studies that show that there are some mutations in this variant that promote syncytium formation.
“Besides, on invading a human cell, it replicates faster. It leads to a strong inflammatory response in organs like the lungs. However it is difficult to say that disease due to delta variant is more severe. The age profile and the deaths during the second wave in India were quite similar to that seen during first wave,” he stated.
“The Delta Plus variant ‘AY.1 and AY.2’has so far been detected in 55-60 cases across 11 states, including Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, and Madhya Pradesh. AY.1 is also found in countries like Nepal, Portugal, Switzerland, Poland, Japan but AY.2 is less prevalent. The variant is still being studied for its transmissibility, virulence, and vaccines escape characteristics,” he said.
ALSO READ: Delta 8 times less sensitive to vaccine antibodies
Dr Arora said current vaccines are effective against Delta variant as per the studies undertaken by ICMR on the issue.
On some parts of the country still witnessing a spurt in the number of cases, he said, though there is a significant dip in the number of cases in most parts of the country, some regions are witnessing a high-Test Positivity Rate (TPR) particularly in the north-eastern part and several districts in the southern states, most of these cases could be due to the Delta variant.
On whether future waves could be prevented, Dr Arora said a virus begins infecting a part of the population, which is most susceptible and also exposed to the infection.
It diminishes after it successfully infects a large proportion of the population and strikes back when the immunity developed in the people post-natural infection fades.
“The cases may go up if a new, more infectious variant comes. In other words, next wave will be driven by a virus variant to which significant proportion of population is susceptible,” he said.
The second wave is still going on. Any future waves will be controlled and delayed if more and more people get vaccinated and most importantly, people follow COVID-Appropriate Behaviour effectively, especially till a substantial part of our population gets vaccinated, he stressed.
People need to focus on vaccination and adherence to Covid appropriate behaviour to manage COVID-19, he added.
There is a need to keep a strict vigil on the emergence of variants of concern and outbreaks so that they can be contained before they spread to a larger region.
The Indian SARS-CoV-2 Genomics Consortium (INSACOG), established in December 2020, was a consortium of 10 laboratories. Recently 18 more laboratories became part of it, he Dr Arora said.
The INSACOG is a consortium of 28 laboratories for whole-genome sequencing in the context of COVID-19 pandemic and was established on December 26, 2020.
The idea is to have a strong network of laboratories to do genomic surveillance of the SARS-CoV-2 and correlate whole genomics sequencing (WGS) data with clinical and epidemiological data to see whether or not a variant is more transmissible, causes more severe disease, escaping immunity or causing breakthrough infections, affecting vaccine efficacy, and diagnosed by current diagnostic tests, he said.
The National Center for Disease Control (NCDC) analyses this data. The entire country has been divided into geographical regions and each lab is given the responsibility of one particular region.
“We have formed 180-190 clusters with around four districts in each cluster. Regular random swab samples and samples of patients who develop severe illness, vaccine breakthrough infections, and other atypical clinical presentations, are collected and sent to regional laboratories for sequencing. The current capacity of the country is to sequence over 50,000 samples per month; earlier it was approximately 30,000 samples,” he said.
The new mutations/variants of concern are cultured and scientific studies are undertaken to see the impact on infectiousness, virulence, vaccine efficacy and immune escape properties.