As Omicron has washed over the US, infecting perhaps 25% of the population already & likely to reach 40% by mid-February—see thread by @trvrb below—it has driven down almost all other respiratory pathogens, with one curious exception I’ll get to later. 1/9
This is not entirely unexpected. Viral infections trigger both innate and adaptive immune responses that can prevent infection by other viruses. Behavior changes likely contribute to this pattern as well. 2/9
There have been some claims that rhinovirus infection protects against SARS-CoV-2 infection. As you can see in the graph below, SARS-CoV-2 and RV prevalence seem almost perfectly inversely related in recent months. 3/9 news.yale.edu/2021/06/15/com…
Rhinoviruses typically peak in spring & fall & are lower during winter, when influenza, coronaviruses, HMPV, RSV, & other viruses thrive, suggesting these viruses & RVs compete & inhibit one another in some way. Great article on RVs by @MackayIM below. 4/9 virologydownunder.com/rhinovirus-ram…
One would expect more closely related viruses to compete most vigorously. The rapid displacement of one SARS-CoV-2 variant by another in this pandemic seems to confirm this. 5/9
The history of influenza also suggests closely related viruses undergo intense competition. It’s thought H3N8 dominated in late 19th c. but was replaced by H1N1 in the 1918 pandemic. H1N1 in turn was displaced by H2N2 in 1957, which vanished when H3N2 appeared in 1968. 6/9
Curiously, H3N2 has persisted through the emergence of H1N1 in 1977 (possible lab leak) & pH1N1 in 2009. The paper linked to below suggests this is because the 2 major proteins on their surfaces are quite different & antigenically distinct. 7/9 journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mB… 6/
This makes the one exception to the downward trend in all non-Omicron respiratory pathogens all the more remarkable. As Omicron has risen, everything else has fallen—except the seasonal coronaviruses, which have risen in step with Omicron. 8/9
OC43, NL63, and 229E have all contributed to the recent rise in seasonal coronavirus cases. (HKU1 has been absent for nearly 2 years now.) I don’t have any idea why this would happen. I’d love to hear what others’ hypotheses are though. 9/9

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More from @LongDesertTrain

Jan 23
No one seems to know what BA.2 means for the world. I'm not aware of any studies on it, but I hope they come out soon. It seems apparent BA.2 will become dominant everywhere before long—as it already has in Denmark.

🧵 of graphs comparing BA.1 & BA.2 in various countries
1/16
Of all the countries with decent genetic surveillance, Denmark has the highest proportion of BA.2. 2/16
According to the Outbreak numbers compiled using @GISAID data, January 12 was when BA.2 surpassed 50% of all cases in Denmark, with 480/955 cases. 3/16
Read 16 tweets
Jan 9
1/6 Important new study from Japan finds that with Omicron, infectious viral loads peak 3-6 days after symptom onset/diagnosis.

So many people are ending isolation & returning to work & school at peak infectiousness. Thanks, @CDCgov.

h/t @gianlucac1
niid.go.jp/niid/en/2019-n…
2/6 They looked at 21 cases: 19 vaxxed, 2 unvaxxed, 17 symptomatic, 4 asymptomatic. For the symptomatic, viral loads (by PCR Ct value) were much higher on days 3-6 after symptom onset than days -1 to 2. Furthermore, many samples still had high viral loads on days 7-9.
3/6 This is very different than what we'd seen with previous variants. Studies by @LucaFerrettiEvo, @DiseaseEcology, & others showed that peak infectiousness previously occurred the day before symptom onset & fell fairly rapidly thereafter. medrxiv.org/content/10.110…
Read 8 tweets
Jan 9
Hard to believe Walensky said this out loud—apparently intentionally.

I'm pretty sure if Trump had said this, all the major media would've been in an uproar for days or weeks—and rightfully so. Why is this not a major story? Has she apologized?
I thought this was a joke tweet, but I followed the link, and there it is, on page 5 of the CDC's 152-page list of "Conditions contributing to deaths involving COVID-19" through Dec 5, 2020: bird fancier's lung.
Reminder that there are people out there who have 4+ comorbidities entirely because they had Covid & never got better. If Omicron kills one of them, what fraction of a "healthy death" is their life worth?

50%?
25%?
10%?

Someone needs to ask Walensky.
Read 4 tweets
Jan 8
1/6 One remarkable but overlooked aspect of this already incredible case of long-range airborne transmission is that the index case was *asymptomatic* through the entire period. He had zero symptoms yet infected 3 people living in an entirely separate room across a hotel hallway.
2/6 ICYMI, this happened in a quarantine facility in New Zealand where cameras, genetic sequencing, frequent testing, & a controlled environment make the direction of transmission indisputable. Definitely worth reading the whole paper (it's not too long).
3/6 I still see Covid denialist claptrap claiming asymptomatic & presymptomatic transmission doesn't happen. This was partly fueled by an extremely flawed 2020 meta-analysis that somehow passed peer review & was published in JAMA. Breakdown below:
Read 8 tweets
Jan 2
1/ Monica Gandhi is living proof that, if you tell people what they want to hear, you will never lack for an audience, nor will you ever run out of major media outlets eager to disseminate your tripe—even if you've been embarrassingly wrong again and again and again.
2/ Gandhi has been minimizing the continuing threat of Covid and campaigning against mitigations and testing for many months now. She literally used the phrase "Delta variant, delta shmariant," at the end of an interview in late June. slate.com/technology/202…
3/ In the same interview, Gandhi's determination to purvey hopium, no matter the facts, led her to make the following remarkable—and false—statement about HIV. "I knew something else from HIV, which is that a virus can't keep on mutating forever."
Read 14 tweets
Jan 1
NYC Mayor Eric Adams, just before he pushed into a crowd of out-of-towners raucously celebrating the New Year: “It’s just great when New York shows the entire country how we come back." (1/5)
"Mayor-elect Eric Adams promised that New York City would soon lead the nation by example." (2/5)
Kindergarten teacher Jennifer Gaitan, while celebrating in Times Square: “In 2020 & 2021 we all had these high expectations, now we have to let come what may... It was my moral imperative to be here."

"Moral imperative"

Meanwhile... (3/5)
Read 5 tweets

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