Provience
Kill!
yeah, yeah, NY post article, I get it (not sure anybody else would try to use the shunned nation label for virus' at the time)
Dated 10 May 2021
University of Florida study April 2021
Dated 10 May 2021
Mutation of highly contagious Brazilian COVID-19 variant found in Florida
A new mutation of the highly-contagious Brazilian COVID-19 variant, dubbed P2 or P.1.1, has emerged in Florida, health officials said.
nypost.com
A new mutation of the highly contagious Brazilian COVID-19 variant has emerged in Florida, health officials said.
The newest variant, dubbed P2 or P.1.1, has a slightly different sequence than Brazil’s P1 strain, which has been found to be more likely to reinfect people who have already had the virus, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported.
COVID-19 vaccine effective against new variant in Brazil
April 9, 2021: UF investigators participate in the first study to determine that the CoronaVac vaccine is 50% effective at preventing COVID-19 in Manaus, Brazil where the P.1 variant is widespread.
epi.ufl.edu
University of Florida study April 2021
New research demonstrates that vaccination with CoronaVac, designed in China, is 50% effective at preventing COVID-19 within Manaus, Brazil.
The study includes a mixture of participants who had received either one or two doses of CoronaVac, which specifies a two-dose regimen for optimal efficacy. Further results are expected in the coming month that will include follow-up of participants who have since received their second dose.
Still, these preliminary findings are encouraging because the city has been ravaged by P.1 — which is widely known as the Brazilian variant of SARS-CoV-2. Manaus’s experience became a global warning regarding the wildcard factor that new variants pose to COVID-19 vaccination and mitigation campaigns.
In the new work, researchers from Brazil, the University of Florida, Yale University and Stanford University performed an observational study among nearly 70,000 health care workers in Manaus from January to March. With 2.2 million residents, Manaus is the country’s seventh-largest city. It lies at the juncture of the Amazon and Negro rivers in the center of the world’s largest rainforest.
This is the first study to evaluate the effectiveness of CoronaVac, developed by Sinovac Biotech, in a population where P.1 is widespread. Data on the vaccine’s effectiveness will continue to be collected over the next few weeks to determine if there are differences in effectiveness between receiving only one or both doses of the two-dose vaccine regimen.
The study is publicly available on the pre-print server medRxiv and has been submitted for scientific peer review.
“These results are very encouraging,” says first author Matt Hitchings, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Florida in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Department of Biology. “We found that vaccination with CoronaVac is effective at reducing symptomatic COVID-19 disease in a setting where there is a lot of transmission of the P.1 variant.”
While the 50% vaccine effectiveness is not as high as other vaccines in other settings, the finding of a protective effect is important given the circulation of the variant.
“The majority of people in the study had only received their first vaccine dose. Overall effectiveness may turn out to be higher as more people receive their second dose,” says lead investigator, Julio Croda, who is a senior researcher at the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, the Brazilian Ministry of Health, and is an adjunct professor at the Yale School of Public Health. “This is a critically important finding for it tells us that ramping up vaccination will turn the tide against the devastating resurgence we are experiencing in Brazil due to the spread of the P.1 variant.”
UF biology professor Derek Cummings, who was hired under the university's preeminence program, also contributed to the study. Both Hitchings and Cummings are affiliated with UF's Emerging Pathogens Institute.
“It has been suggested that these new variants might be able to evade immunity generated by other vaccines,” Cummings says. “We need to understand how well CoronaVac will work where P.1 is the dominant virus in circulation.”
The rise of P.1
The P.1 variant was first identified in several travelers from Brazil, who were tested during routine screening at Haneda airport outside Tokyo, Japan, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It emerged in Manaus in late 2020 and has since spread throughout Brazil and into neighboring countries. In late January 2021, it was detected in the United States.
P.1 is characterized by 17 unique mutations, including three in the receptor-binding domain of the spike protein, that make it more transmissible and potentially more dangerous.
Brazil has been particularly hard hit by the pandemic and variants of the virus. The country’s overall death toll from the disease is close to 337,000, which is second only to the United States. Recently, Brazil recorded more than 4,000 COVID-19-related deaths in a single day. Prior to its current surge, Manaus experienced a massive outbreak where researchers estimate that up to three-quarters of the city’s residents were infected, though not all were symptomatic.