From mu to C.1.2, here are the latest coronavirus variants scientists are watching closely - Action News
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From mu to C.1.2, here are the latest coronavirus variants scientists are watching closely

Scientists have warned the coronavirus will keep evolving as it spreads around the world, and there are now multiple new variants being watched closely by global research teams. CBC explains why these new variants matter and what they are capable of.

New variants keep emerging, but 'no need for panic yet' in Canada as delta maintains its grip

A health-care worker administers the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine to a woman in Johannesburg on Aug. 20. Scientists in that country first detected a new C.1.2 variant there in May. (Sumaya Hisham/Reuters)

Scientists have warned the coronavirus will keep evolving as it spreads around the world, and there are now multiple new variants being watched closely by global research teams.

One of those, B.1.621, also known as mu, has been dubbed the latest variant of interest by the World Health Organization (WHO). Another, C.1.2, is the subject of headline-making new research exploring how it behaves. Other variants are likely waiting in the wings, yet to be detected.

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So why do these new variants matter, what are they capable of, and how much should Canadians care?

Right now, the highly-contagious delta variant deemed a variant of concern by the WHO back in May is dominating Canada's COVID-19 cases, making up more than 90 per cent of reported recent infections according to federal data.

But that doesn't mean other emerging variants don't warrant close observation.

"Looking at this virus, it's obvious that we will have new variants," said Alyson Kelvin, a virologist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization (VIDO) at the University of Saskatchewan.

"What we need to do is to be ready for identifying cases as well as other variants that are inevitably going to start emerging around the world."

Here's what Canadians need to know:

What is the B.1.621 or mu variant?

B.1.621 is the latest variant of interest, according to the WHO, and was given the designation and a catchier Greek alphabet-based name, "mu" on August 30.

"The mu variant has a constellation of mutations that indicate potential properties of immune escape," reads the WHO's latest weekly epidemiological update.

That means those with some level of immunity to earlier strains, either by previous infection or vaccination, mightbe susceptible to infection from mu but that's only according to preliminary data and "needs to be confirmed by further studies," the update continued.

People line up outside a vaccination centre in Melbourne, Australia, in August as the city experiences its sixth lockdown while battling an outbreak of the delta variant of the coronavirus. (William West/AFP/Getty Images)

The variant was first detected in Colombia back in January, and since then, the country has experienced hundreds of cases and the variant has also been reported in 39 other countries around the world.

Here in Canada, it's barely making a splash: Mu cases have been reported for weeks, but so far, the variant hasn't made up more than three per cent of cases in any given week and recently totalled just 0.3 per cent though federal data since mid-July is still accumulating and could change.

What is the C.1.2 variant?

The variant C.1.2 isn't deemed a variant of interest or concern yet by the WHO, but researchers are pushing the organization to watch it closely.

A team of scientists from South Africa detected the new variant, which was first observed in May and has since spread to seven other countries in Africa, Europe, Asia and Oceania, according to a preprint study that hasn't yet been peer-reviewed.

"It's still not clear where this came from," noted Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious diseases specialist with McMaster University in Hamilton. "It was first identified in South Africa but people need to know that South Africa has actually quite good sequencing networks and so it may not be the origin."

A health-care worker fills a syringe with a dose of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine in Bogota, Colombia, on Aug. 15. The country first detected the mu variant back in January. (Luisa Gonzalez/Reuters)

Richard Lessells, an infectious disease specialist and one of the authors of the research on C.1.2, told Reuters the variant may have even more immune-evasion properties than delta, based on its pattern of mutations, and that the findings had been flagged to the WHO.

However, it's not known yet if the variant is actually more contagious,or more capable of evading the immunity provided by either vaccines or a prior coronavirus infection.

"These things need time to see," Chagla said. "Delta is incredibly fit, and incredibly virulent and replaces [other strains] aggressively. We still haven't seen suggestions of this yet [with C.1.2]."

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Speaking with Power & Politics, Chief Science Advisor of Canada Mona Nemer says that collective immunity is a moving target but will be difficult to achieve due to the emergence of new COVID variants.

How worried should Canadians be right now?

Given that delta makes up the lion's share of Canada's COVID-19 cases and there's still much we don't know about mu or C.1.2 concerns over emerging variants need to be put into context.

Chagla said it's important to keep studying and monitoring the C.1.2 variant, but "there's no need for panic yet."

There has been an increased spread of C.1.2, and it's a rising percentage of sequenced cases in various countries outside of South Africa, Chagla said, but nothing on the scale of delta and it remains to be seen if we'll experience more global spread.

"It's still not clear whether or not that just means there's a lot of local spread amongst particular groups that just seems to be over-represented or if it's a legitimate growth pattern," he added.

"We still don't know, if you put things in the same pool, whether or not delta is going to be much more virulent."

Chagla says that much like other variants that have emerged over the course of the pandemic including variants of concern like alpha, beta, lambda and, now, mu they could either be overtaken by delta or "burn themselves out over time."

"Right now, it seems that there aren't a large number of cases for [C.1.2]," Kelvin said. "But now that we have this identified, then surveillance centres around the world can start to determine, are they seeing numbers of these cases as well?"

To figure out how often variant cases are appearing here, the Public Health Agency of Canada works with the provinces, territories,and the Canadian COVID Genomics Network (CanCOGen)to sequence a percentage of all positive COVID-19 test results.

Sequencing reveals the genetic code of the virus, showing which variant was involved in a specific case of COVID-19, and those results are reported each week.

Dr. Catalina Lopez-Correa, chief scientific officer at Genome Canada and executive director ofCanCOGen, said there is still "very little data" from the real world on the increased threat of the variant.

"The key message for Canada is that we are actively monitoring for this variant," she said."It has not been detected yet here and we are also actively following up all the data that is published and shared across the globe."




Why do new variants matter in the global fight against COVID-19?

New variants have emerged throughout the pandemic in populations with low vaccine coverage that have been hit hard by unchecked COVID-19 transmission including India, South America and Africa and experts say this trend is likely to continue until more of the world is vaccinated.

"This is an incredibly big reminder even if this is a false alarm of what global vaccine equity means," said Chagla.

"Many of us starting to see the delta wave in Sub-Saharan Africa were very, very worried about what could come of that."

WATCH | WHO calls for vaccine equity:

WHO comments on need for global COVID-19 vaccine equity

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People in wealthier countries are getting vaccinated at a much faster rate than those in poorer countries despite efforts by the World Health Organization and the international community to make COVID-19 vaccine accessibility equitable around the world.

Chagla says the region has low vaccination levels, poor quality healthcare systems and a large population of immunocompromised individuals, with rates of HIV in some countries as high as 15 to 20 per cent of the adult population.

"That was kind of a mixing pot of bad scenarios to lead to the development of a variant so I don't think we can be surprised to see that something seems to have shown up," he said.

"And we kind of just watch it happen in that sense,and we continue to watch it happen."

It's also clear these variants don't stay put.

Even if they emerge in one area of the world, cases later appearelsewhere meaning other countries,including Canada, are eventually impacted yet again by this ever-evolving virus.

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