3 cases of highly infectious Delta variant confirmed in El Paso
EL PASO, Texas -- Three cases of the very contagious Covid-19 Delta variant have been confirmed in El Paso, all among unvaccinated people.
The announcement came from El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser and County Judge Ricardo Samaniego at a briefing on Friday afternoon.
The three variant cases involved women in their 20s, 40s and 60s, the officials indicated.
One of the women was briefly hospitalized due to the variant, while the other two experienced more mild symptoms. All three were isolated, underwent contact tracing and have since passed the infectious period.
As a preventative measure against the spread of the variant, the two leaders asked El Pasoans to wear face masks. (You can watch their remarks in their entirety in the video player below.)
In addition, El Paso City-County Health Authority Dr. Hector Ocaranza urged those who hadn't yet done so to get vaccinated right away.
“It should come as no surprise to our community that the Delta variant is now confirmed in our community. We knew it was only a matter of time, which is why it is important for members of our community to get vaccinated,” said Ocaranza. “The vaccine provides an important layer of protection to individuals who may become seriously ill if they get the virus."
Ocaranza noted that the symptoms of the Delta variant appear to be the same as Covid-19; however, he added that "physicians are seeing people getting sicker quicker, especially younger individuals."
Here's what's known so far about the variant.
What the Delta variant is
The Delta variant, originally known as B.1.617.2, has been around since late last year but in recent months it has become speedily dominant in many countries. It accounts for more than 80% of newly diagnosed cases in the US, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"Covid-19 cases have increased over 300% nationally from June 19 to July 23, 2021, along with parallel increases in hospitalizations and deaths driven by the highly transmissible B.1.617.2 (Delta) variant," the CDC said in a Health Alert Network advisory this week.
The Delta variant is more transmissible
How much more is not really clear. Estimates range from 60% more to over 200% more, depending on who is doing the estimates.
One CDC document indicates the Delta variant is about as transmissible as chickenpox -- with each infected person infecting as many as eight or nine others, on average. The original strain of coronavirus, the CDC indicated was about as contagious as the common cold, with each infected person infecting two others.
It's a difficult number to check, because figuring that out would require much more testing than is being done now. People who test positive would have to submit samples for genomic sequencing, and that's only done in a few places in the US.
And to compare its transmissibility to past variants would require that kind of testing to have been done in past months -- and that simply was not done.
So everything relies on estimates.
British infectious disease modelers, a group known as the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling, Operational sub-group, say the data indicate the Delta is 40-60% more transmissible than the B.1.1.7 or Alpha variant, which was once the dominant strain in the US but which has been replaced by Delta. They say it's almost twice as transmissible as the original strains of the virus first seen in China.
Delta may cause more serious disease
Hospital emergency rooms and intensive care units are filling up with patients again in parts of the U.S. It may look like the Delta variant is making people sicker, but more than 90% of people showing up for treatment are unvaccinated, according to the CDC and hospital officials.
So while people may be more likely to become infected in the first place with Delta if they are unvaccinated, there's no hard data yet showing that Delta causes more serious disease.
The CDC cites three older studies, from Canada, Singapore and Scotland, indicating people infected with Delta end up in the hospital more often.
What is also happening is that younger people are making up a larger share of those getting sick. More than 80% of Americans over 65 are fully vaccinated, according to the CDC. But younger Americans are not vaccinated at the same rate, so they're the ones showing up in ERs.
It may be more able to infect even fully vaccinated people
No vaccine is 100% effective, and many thousands of people who are fully vaccinated have nonetheless become infected -- something known as a breakthrough case.
The CDC released a startling study Friday looking at an outbreak in Provincetown, Massachusetts where 74% of people who got infected had been fully vaccinated -- and four of them ended up in the hospital.
The outbreak involved 469 people who caught Covid earlier this month.
"Testing identified the Delta variant in 90% of specimens from 133 patients," the researchers from the CDC and local health departments wrote in the CDC's weekly report.
It's the first big study to contradict earlier evidence that vaccinated people are almost completely safe from serious disease, even involving Delta and other variants.
This was noted in a CDC presentation made to Walensky this week.
"Vaccines prevent more than 90% of severe disease, but may be less effective at preventing infection or transmission," it reads. "Therefore, more breakthrough and more community spread despite vaccination."
The CDC now notes this on its website.
"Available evidence suggests the currently authorized mRNA COVID-19 vaccines (Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna) are highly effective against hospitalization and death for a variety of strains, including Alpha (B.1.1.7), Beta (B.1.351), Gamma (P.1), and Delta (B.1.617.2)," the CDC says.
"Data suggest lower effectiveness against confirmed infection and symptomatic disease caused by the Beta, Gamma, and Delta variants compared with the ancestral strain and Alpha variant. Ongoing monitoring of vaccine effectiveness against variants is needed," the CDC adds.
Tests done in lab dishes had indicated the immune response generated by vaccines should be, in theory, strong and broad enough to cover Delta.
It may be more infectious in breakthrough cases than past strains
While the CDC originally told people that the vaccinated are less likely to infect others, CDC's Walensky said this week the Delta variant may be different.
The Provincetown study released Friday shows that. "Persons with Covid-19 reported attending densely packed indoor and outdoor events at venues that included bars, restaurants, guest houses, and rental homes," the researchers wrote.
Tests on the infected people showed the fully vaccinated had as much virus in their bodies as unvaccinated people did.
"High viral loads suggest an increased risk of transmission and raised concern that, unlike with other variants, vaccinated people infected with Delta can transmit the virus. This finding is concerning and was a pivotal discovery leading to CDC's updated mask recommendation," Walensky said in a statement.
Because of this and other evidence, the CDC now says even vaccinated people should wear masks in areas of sustained or high transmission. It's because vaccinated people may get exposed and then may have enough virus growing in their bodies to infect someone else, even if they don't have symptoms.
"Findings from this investigation suggest that even jurisdictions without substantial or high COVID-19 transmission might consider expanding prevention strategies, including masking in indoor public settings regardless of vaccination status, given the potential risk of infection during attendance at large public gatherings that include travelers from many areas with differing levels of transmission," the team reporting on the Provincetown outbreak wrote.
A lot of what is known comes from one study done by researchers in China.
They found viral loads of people infected with Delta were 1,000 times higher than people infected at the very beginning of the pandemic.
Jing Lu of the Guangdong Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention and colleagues also said the virus transmitted more quickly -- in four days, compared to six days at the beginning of the pandemic.
People who make back-of-the-envelope statements about Delta's properties are often referring to this single study. For instance, New York University infectious disease specialist Dr. Celine Gounder created a stir when she said people could be infected by Delta in just one second of exposure, compared to 15 minutes at the beginning of the pandemic.
This wasn't based on scientific observations. Gounder was extrapolating from Lu's study, she explained on Twitter.
It has some unique mutations
The Delta strain has a constellation of mutations that mark it.
Each variant carries a cluster of different mutations. When these mutations start to make a particular lineage of virus behave differently or have different effects, it gets tagged as a variant of concern or a variant of interest.
Delta has at least three mutations on a structure that is called the receptor binding domain -- the part of the virus that directly docks into the human cells it infects. They may help it escape detection by the immune system and at least one of them may help it bind more tightly to cells.
Another mutation in a place known as the furin cleavage site -- it's on the characteristic spike protein -- might also help make the virus infect cells more easily, according to the American Society of Microbiology.
"The mutation is thought to increase viral infectivity and transmissibility; however, research indicates that it must occur on the background of additional spike protein mutations in order to be consequential," the ASM says.
It doesn't have some of the mutations that made other variants more transmissible, including one called N501Y that characterizes the Alpha or B.1.1.7 variant; the Beta or B.1.351 variant; and the Gamma or P1 variant. It also lacks a mutation called E484K seen in Beta and Gamma.
The answer to the spread, infectious disease experts universally say, is more vaccination. "If we have more and more people vaccinated, we will win in this race," Walensky said this week.
(CNN contributed to this report.)