Twin Cities wastewater shows steady COVID-19 increase

The coronavirus load in Twin Cities wastewater more than doubled over the past week, indicating a rising spread of COVID-19 in Minnesota.

The increase reported Friday by the Metropolitan Council was influenced by a one-day blip on April 17 that revealed the highest viral load in wastewater since the end of the severe omicron COVID-19 wave in January. However, the viral load in samples from the St. Paul treatment plant increased last week even without that outlier, and the trend matches increases in confirmed COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations as well.

The Minnesota Department of Health on Friday reported another 1,464 coronavirus infections, excluding infections identified by at-home antigen tests that aren’t publicly reported. The seven-day average of new infections was 398 per day on April 1, but it increased to 827 on Tuesday. COVID-19 hospitalizations in Minnesota rose from 183 on April 10 to 234 on Thursday.

The rising totals remain far below pandemic peaks — with new cases exceeding 13,000 per day in mid-January and hospitalizations reaching 1,629 on Jan. 14. Health officials also are hopeful that an increase in infections won’t cause a comparable surge in hospitalizations and deaths.

Only 24 of the COVID-19 hospitalizations on Thursday involved people placed in intensive care because of breathing problems or other complications. That 10% ICU usage rate is the lowest in the pandemic, indicating that the current virus might be milder, treatments are improving, or that recent infections and vaccinations have left many Minnesotans with immunity protection against severe illness.

A review of blood drawn for various medical tests in January found that more than 48% showed the presence of coronavirus antibodies indicating infections. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention consequently estimated that nearly 2.7 million Minnesotans already had been infected by then — compared with the 1.4 million that have been identified by reportable COVID-19 tests.

Minnesota’s COVID-19 death toll is 12,492, including 10 deaths reported on Friday.

Health officials are concerned immunity levels from recent infections and vaccinations could be waning and people could become more vulnerable to COVID-19 again. While Minnesota is ahead of national averages on COVID-19 vaccinations, the state estimates only 49% of residents 5 and older are up to date with their shots. Up to date means they either recently received their initial doses or received scheduled first boosters to maintain immunity.

The abundance of treatment options also has resulted in a test-to-treat approach in which doctors and prescribers can directly order antiviral pills or monoclonal antibody infusions when patients test positive.

The state this week reported about 14,000 available courses of Paxlovid, an antiviral pill that is most effective when taken shortly after infection. Some monoclonal antibodies have been phased out because they don’t work against circulating strains of the virus, but the state has about 3,500 courses of bebtelovimab, which remains effective.

COVID-19 activity in Minnesota is being fueled by a fast-spreading BA.2 coronavirus subvariant, which recently caused pandemic waves in several European nations. Wastewater sampling showed that BA.2 was responsible for more than 90% of the viral load in the Twin Cities over the past week.

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