Dr. Deepti Gurdasani Profile picture
Jan 28, 2022 28 tweets 7 min read Read on X
Really worried about the direction things are moving in globally. BA.2 and BA.1.1. seem to be sweeping to dominance in different regions rapidly. Pandemic growth has also resumed in many places including England, & more recently Gauteng. A thread looking at the current evidence.
Remember that the virus is continuously mutating and evolving. There are 4 sublineages of omicron currently identified BA.1, BA.2, BA.3, and BA.1.1. There are several differences between these. e.g. BA.1.1 has the R346K mutation additional to BA.1.
BA.2 differs on several positions. An important one for detection is the deletion that allowed us to initially detect omicron on some PCR tests as 'spike gene drop out' or SGTF. This means that BA.2 will *not* appear as SGTF (unlike BA.1 that does)
BA.2 is now growing to dominance rapidly against a BA.1 background in many parts of the world - Denmark and Gauteng (where it is dominant now)- suggesting it has a growth advantage over BA.1. It has rapidly gained dominance in Denmark, where cases continue to rise.
Data from Denmark appear to suggest a considerable growth advantage - potentially 1.5 fold of BA.2 over BA.1. This will mean faster pandemic growth, and make it harder to contain this even with NPIs.
In Norway, *both* BA.2 and BA.1.1 seem to be rising against a BA.1 background - which is declining. This will be an important context to understand the relative advantages of BA.2 and BA.1.1 against each other given BA.1.1 is rapidly rising in the US as well.
BA.2 has become dominant in Gauteng, where cases
are rising again (just 2 months after the omicron outbreak).
In England BA.2 rising rapidly. B.1.1 has also been rising, but looks lie BA.2 is outcompeting all (not visible on this graph but can be seen in the SGTF ONS data in the linked tweet) - ~5.5% of cases and rising.
In the US, BA.1 seems to be being rapidly replaced by BA.1.1 in some states
So what we're seeing is newer sublineages of omicron outcompeting previous ones. The advantage of one over the other is unclear- it could be 1) escape (i.e. BA.2 or BA.1.1 escape immunity better) or 2) transmissibility
The UKHSA data suggests vaccine efficacy is similar for BA.1 & BA.2 - this means that at least vaccines against the original virus are similarly protective against BA.1 and BA.2 (i.e. much lower VE than delta, but not different between the 2 sublineages)
Of course this doesn't really tell us about the protection to BA.2 infection among those who very recently got infected with BA.1. It'll be important to understand this, but it is possible that the advantage is being driven by increase in intrinsic transmissibility
Overall, this isn't good- what we're seeing is rapid adaptation, and emergency of sublineages, fitter than the original, which means it becomes very hard to contain the pandemic, as the virus gets fitter. Bizarrely we're easing mitigations in England in the middle of this!
Drops in cases have plateaued in England and cases are now at ~100K/day. And BA.2, which seems to have a significant growth advantage is rising to dominance, just as we have dropped plan B measures and school mitigations. What could possible go wrong?
To make things worse, UKHSA vaccine report paints a dire picture with vaccine efficacy, even for severe disease waning significantly over time. Remember that a reduction in vaccine efficacy 96% to 88% (Delta 2 dose vs omicron booster) was a 3x increase in risk.
Now, it seems that protection even against hospitalisation wanes even further at 10+ weeks. While 70-80% protection sounds great, remember this is a *huge* reduction from where we were with delta, and will have significant impact on hospitalisation rates at population level.
Protection against infection is even lower, and wanes even more. Even protection against mortality appears to wane, but lots of uncertainty around these estimates so need to be viewed with caution.
Overall, we seem to be in a continuing pandemic, with very high case numbers, 1,800 COVID-19 deaths/wk (no sign of these reducing yet). And fitter lineages on track to become dominant in the coming weeks, at the point we've eased all mitigations and cases are at 100K/day.
The situation is dire across the world after all the claims of 'mildness' and endemicity. You just need to look across Europe, the US, and Israel to see that the cases have sadly translated into many people who have been severely ill and thousands of preventable deaths.
In the middle of this bizarrely much of the media is talking about the pandemic as if it's over, when in fact there doesn't appear to be an end in sight - at least in much of the Western world which has massively screwed up it's response.
To the 'but it's mild' cabal, unfortunately the sheer numbers of cases are translating to severe pressures on health systems and increase in the number of preventable deaths, as many of us said would happen (but were ignored).
Rather than acknowledging we need to adapt to this quickly by putting in place long-term measures like better ventilation, changing the way we work (more working from home), high grade masks in indoor & crowded spaces, we're continuing to be in denial.
We can contain this- this is an airborne virus. Many countries have done this far more successfully than we have. But the biggest threat we face now isn't SARS-CoV-2. It's denial that we need change and long-term solutions. Denial will prolong the pandemic and kill many more.
We need a suppression strategy. This level of illness, death, mass disruption of healthcare systems and education isn't something we can and should live with. We can do so much better. Why aren't we? We're still continuing to rely solely on vaccines even as we watch efficacy wane
Every time a new variant of concern emerges our vaccines become less and less robust and durable, but we're doing nothing to manage the huge uncertainty associated with this. We need suppression strategies. Countries that have done this are doing *much* better.
This is really the only way of 'living with it' that's sustainable and feasible. It's better for health, economy, society. Why aren't we doing this? An appeal to journalists- please stop platforming deniers.
We need solutions, but we can't even discuss these if the narrative is 'it's over'. We need to move on from this part of narrative to discussing long-term solutions, but that needs us to stop normalising what is a pandemic and a crisis, so we can act.
If you believe 'it's over', just look around you- talk to healthcare workers, teachers, parents, those living with long COVID, carers, clinically vulnerable people, frontline workers. It isn't over. Not by a long shot.

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More from @dgurdasani1

Nov 18, 2024
The idea that people are chronically ill or disabled because they don't want to get better or aren't trying to get better is borne out of nothing but abelism. It's easier to think it's the patient's fault rather than acknowledge you don't know how to help patients. 🧵
There isn't a shred of evidence to support this view, yet it gets constantly doled out by medics to patients who are struggling & would do anything to get better. The impact is further gaslighting a patient population that has been offered very little for decades.
The lack of curiosity about patients' illness means that no one delves further to try and understand it, because it's so much easier to just throw up your hands, and blame them for being ill. As if anyone would want to live with debilitating chronic illness if they had a choice.
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Nov 8, 2024
Rather concerning that only 5% of dairy farmworkers *exposed to ill cows after H5N1 detection* wore CDC recommended PPE. H5N1 (avian influenza) is highly pathogenic, and this is really worrying, given the large numbers of spillover events that have been observed in humans lately Image
H5N1 has been adapting to mammals, with the recent circulating strain in dairy adapted specifically to binding to cells in the human respiratory tract. Mammal to mammal transmission has been suspected in specific outbreaks (e.g. mink in Spain), but not shown clearly in others.
Thankfully, efficient human to human transmission hasn't been observed yet, but if it's given a chance to spread across mammals in farms, with multiple spill overs into humans, it's only a matter of time.
Read 10 tweets
Nov 8, 2024
The hubris of blaming those whose families & communities have been slaughtered by your leaders for not voting for those same leaders - because now *you* feel unsafe - while sitting in your intact homes that are not being razed to the ground, with your children alive and safe.
Implicit in this cry of American liberals is the devaluation of brown and Muslim lives. If it were their relatives murdered by their government, against their screams and protests, it's unlikely they would've voted for them. But white lives and safety always matter more.
A genocide becomes 'a single issue'. If it were a genocide of white Americans, I can guarantee it wouldn't be a 'single issue'. You can just see this by all the tweets about how Americans now feel unsafe.
Read 15 tweets
Jun 18, 2024
If you've lived this long and have not had to realise that - *everything*- where you live, what you read, the streets you walk, what you eat, what you feel, where you work, the climate you live in, and even the air you breathe is political, I have news for you: that's privilege.
I automatically find myself looking at how people parse the world, and whether they fit into the former or the latter.
People who understand the systemically unjust & violent nature of the world, and how literally everything is shaped by capitalism, imperialism, colonialism are the people who understand the need for change, and the radical means necessary to enact this.
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May 8, 2024
COVID has disproportionately affected disabled, clinically vulnerable, deprived & black/brown/indigenous communities. To say that that airborne precautions worsen inequity is BS. Rather, these protect *everyone*. If you care about equity, set air Q standards, provide respirators.
The WHO has done so much harm in this regard, & still continues to, because they simply cannot seem to acknowledge that they were wrong, and that very likely caused harm - which led to loss of life, and to chronic illness in many. We need accountability & learning here. Not lies.
If @WHO wants to restore any trust, they must acknowledge mistakes that have caused untold harm, and seek to show learning and change. None of this is happening when they say BS like this, and parade people like Farrar with more lies and BS to try to justify the unjustifiable.
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May 3, 2024
I remember all those who told us that RAT sensitivity was near 100% to detect 'infectiousness' - this study reports 47% compared with RT-PCR and 80% compared with viral culture. The lowest sensitivity is for those who are asymptomatic, and also during the pre-symptomatic phase.🧵 Image
Sensitivity of RATs tends to rise when symptoms begin, but there is infectiousness before this that may not be picked up. Apart from the obvious impacts on transmission, this also has v. important impacts on treatment for people who are clinically vulnerable. Image
For many people who are clinically vulnerable, the primary consideration is getting treatment to them on time. Given the low sensitivity of RATs against PCR, especially in the early periods of infection, treatment may be significantly delayed by reliance on RATs over PCR.
Read 9 tweets

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