Prior Infection Is Little Defense Against Omicron Variant, Scientists Say

Evidence from South Africa, where the Omicron variant already dominates, shows 
a high rate of reinfection of people who have already had the coronavirus

By Lynsey Chutel and Richard Pérez-Peña Dec. 2, 2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/02/world/africa/virus-omicron-variant-reinfection.html


A past coronavirus infection appears to give little immunity to the new Omicron 
variant rippling across the globe, South African scientists warned on Thursday, 
potentially tearing away one layer of defense that humanity has won slowly and 
at immense cost.

Just a week after its existence was revealed to the world, the heavily mutated 
variant, which scientists fear could be the most contagious one yet, is already 
by far the dominant form of the virus in South Africa and spreading fast, 
according to officials there.

Top European disease experts said Thursday that it could be the dominant form 
in Europe within a few months.

By Thursday, Omicron had been detected in 25 countries on six continents, and 
experts say it will soon be in every populated corner on earth. That could mean 
that a world already battered by two years of pandemic and — until recently — 
harboring hopes for recovery is instead headed for another wave of cases.

Scientists have known since early in the pandemic that the immunity gained from 
a coronavirus infection is not total, and probably not permanent, and that some 
people are reinfected.

Even so, with a huge number of people already infected and recovered — about 
260 million worldwide that have been detected, and in reality far more, experts 
say — whatever protection they had looked like an important layer in the 
world’s defenses.

The new variant calls that into question.

Scientists in South Africa have reported a sudden, sharp rise in November in 
coronavirus cases among people in that country who had already been infected, 
in a study that has not yet been reviewed and published by a scientific 
journal. The authors noted that there was no such upswing when the Beta and 
Delta variants emerged.

They did not say how many of those reinfections could be attributed to Omicron, 
but South Africa’s National Institute for Communicable Diseases reported on 
Wednesday that when it conducted a genetic analysis on a sampling of 
coronavirus-positive test results from November, almost three-quarters were the 
new variant.

“Population-level evidence suggests that the Omicron variant is associated with 
substantial ability to evade immunity from prior infection,” the authors of the 
unpublished study wrote.

In an online briefing held by the World Health Organization’s regional office 
for Africa, South African scientists presented a blunter version of the same 
conclusion, simply based on the country’s raw numbers: About 40 percent of the 
population has had the coronavirus and about 30 percent has been at least 
partially vaccinated (though there is no doubt some overlap), and yet the 
number of new cases is soaring.

“We believe that previous infection does not provide them protection from 
infection due to Omicron,” said Anne von Gottberg, a microbiologist at the 
communicable disease institute.

South Africa has the world’s fastest-growing caseload, though the figures are 
small compared to those in many other countries. In the first half of November, 
it was averaging about 260 reported new cases a day. On Tuesday, the figure was 
over 4,300, the highest in months. It jumped to more than 8,600 on Wednesday, 
and to more than 11,500 on Thursday.

The Omicron variant has dozens of genetic mutations not seen together before in 
the virus, and scientists say that the number and type of changes suggest that 
it is much more transmissible than earlier forms, though solid proof of that is 
still lacking.

Hundreds of Omicron cases have been found in Europe already, and the rapid 
spread has raised fears it will prolong the current wave.

The early evidence suggests that Omicron “may have a substantial growth 
advantage over the Delta” variant, the European Center for Disease Prevention 
and Control reported on Thursday.

“If this is the case,” it said, “mathematical modeling indicates that the 
Omicron VOC is expected to cause over half of all” coronavirus infections in 
the European Union “within the next few months.”


Reporting was contributed by Apoorva Mandavilli, Sheryl Gay Stolberg, 
Christopher F. Schuetze, Jin Yu Young, Cora Engelbrecht, Monika Pronczuk, Niki 
Kitsantonis and Megan Specia.

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