Modeling omicron’s spread
Fred Hutch infectious disease modeler Dr. Joshua Schiffer and colleagues are modeling how omicron will likely spread within one community — the Seattle area where the Hutch is located. In a Dec. 31 story, Schiffer told NPR that omicron has been spreading as fast as the original strain of the coronavirus at the beginning of the pandemic, despite the immunity we now have.
"The playing field for the virus right now is quite different than it was in the early days," Schiffer said. "The majority of variants we've seen to date couldn't survive in this immune environment."
Even delta was essentially at a "tie," he told NPR, where it was persisting, but "not growing very rapidly or decreasing very rapidly."
High rates of asymptomatic omicron infection
Fred Hutch virologist Corey is the senior author of a paper posted on the preprint server medRxiv on Dec. 27 detailing a South African study showing that omicron appears to have a much higher rate of “asymptomatic carriage” — nasal swabs testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 in people who have no obvious symptoms of the disease.
The preliminary findings, part of a study that provided extensive testing of people living with HIV who received COVID-19 vaccines, found positive results in 32% of samples, about seven to 12 times more than found in prior studies before the emergence of the omicron variant.
“As we witness the quick, global spread of omicron, it is clear that we urgently need a better understanding of the transmission dynamics of this variant,” Corey said in a press release. “Since so many people may be asymptomatic, we can’t always know who is carrying the virus, but we do know what we can do to protect ourselves and to help prevent further spread: Wear a mask; wash your hands; avoid large, indoor gatherings; and get fully vaccinated as soon as possible.”
Evidence that boosters protect against severe illness
By the end of December, experts said that the evidence from several countries indicates that healthy people who have been vaccinated, especially if they’ve received a booster, were unlikely to require hospitalization if they became infected with omicron. But since the variant spreads easily and is infecting many people, including many who are vulnerable, this still means that a lot of people need to be cared for in already short-staffed hospitals.
“We need to be respectful of the fact that our hospital system has been under this kind of duress for such a long time,” Corey told the Washington Post on Dec. 28. “We need to do everything we can to not allow the situation, where there’s such crowding and such intensity that we can’t optimally take care of the people who get severe disease.”
On Jan. 6, Corey told KXLY TV in Spokane, Washington, that scientists should know soon whether a reformulated booster, specifically tailored to block omicron, will be needed.
“We’re looking at omicron vaccines and what we’ll call the ancestral strain vaccines. I think for us we want to see if the immune responses to the omicron variant is better than ancestral strain and when we know that, probably by the end of February, we’ll pull the trigger on what’s the next best approach for another boost,” he said.