Tag Archives: worrying

Madison Keys, content on ‘not worrying about last year,’ secures bid to Australian Open semifinals

MELBOURNE, Australia — Madison Keys continued her resurgent 2022 season by advancing to the Australian Open semifinals for the first time in seven years.

And resurgent might be a major understatement.

Her 6-3, 6-2 quarterfinal win over French Open champion Barbora Krejcikova on Tuesday was her 10th match win in a row and 11th of the new year. She served 11 aces, 27 winners and dropped just one service game.

Her run in ’22 includes five wins so far at Melbourne Park, starting with a straight-sets victory over 2020 Australian Open winner Sofia Kenin, plus five in winning the Adelaide International — her first title since 2019 — and one at an earlier Melbourne tournament.

Her total number of wins in all of 2021? That same number, 11.

“I did everything I could to rest this offseason and focus on starting fresh and new … starting from zero and not focusing on last year,” Keys said in her on-court interview. “I think it’s going well so far!”

Last week, Keys gave more details on how terrible 2021 was for her.

“I was just at a very high anxiety level all of the time,” Keys said. “I wasn’t sleeping as well. It felt like there was literally a weight on my chest just because I became so focused and obsessed with it that I wasn’t enjoying really anything because it’s all that I was thinking about.”

Her year-end ranking slumped to 56th, and it was the first time since 2014 she’d finished outside the top 20.

In 2015, Keys lost an Australian Open semifinal to Serena Williams, her first trip to the final four at a major. She reached the final at the 2017 US Open and semis at Roland Garros and the US Open in 2018, but hadn’t made it back to the last four in a Grand Slam since then.

The feeling in Melbourne will be vastly different. She could be facing either top-ranked Ash Barty, an Australian, or fellow American Jessica Pegula.

“I’m seven years older and it’s not my first semifinal of a Slam,” she said. “I think I’m a little bit more prepared this time around than I was all those years ago.”

Krejcikova took a medical timeout while trailing 5-2 in the first set from what might have been heat stress, and appeared to be lethargic at times during the 35-minute second set.

Temperatures was peaking toward 32 degrees Celsius (90 Fahrenheit) under almost cloudless skies.

“It was the heat with some physical conditions that started to bother me after five games,” Krejcikova, who is still playing in the doubles draw, said. “I mean, from there on, you know, I just couldn’t put it together.

“I have been struggling with something. Yes, it was happening and I didn’t feel good. I just don’t want to talk about it because I think Madison, she really deserves the win and she really deserves to get the credit. “

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Top US general says Russia activity near Ukraine worrying | Military News

Army General Mark Milley says Russian military moves around country enough to trigger ‘a lot of concern’.

The United States is tracking enough indicators and warnings surrounding Russian military activity near Ukraine to trigger “a lot of concern” and Russian rhetoric appears increasingly strident, the top military officer in the US said.

Army General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, declined to speculate on Thursday about the kinds of options the United States might consider in the event of a Russian invasion.

But Milley stressed the importance of Ukraine’s sovereignty to Washington and to the NATO alliance.

“There’s significant national security interests of the United States and of NATO member states at stake here if there was an overt act of aggressive action militarily by the Russians into a nation state that has been independent since 1991,” Milley said during a flight from Seoul to Washington, DC.

Ukraine says Russia has amassed more than 90,000 troops near the two countries’ border, while Moscow accuses Kyiv of pursuing its own military build-up.

It has dismissed as inflammatory suggestions it is preparing for an attack on Ukraine and has defended its right to deploy troops on its territory as it sees fit.

Earlier in the day, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned Moscow of “severe costs and consequences” if it invaded Ukraine and urged Sergey Lavrov, his Russian counterpart, to find a diplomatic solution to the crisis.

Blinken and Lavrov were meeting in Stockholm, the Swedish capital.

Russia seized Crimea from Ukraine in 2014.



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Scientists Track Coronavirus Variant With ‘Worrying’ Number of Mutations

  • A variant with ‘worrying’ number of mutations has been detected in South Africa, Botswana, and Hong Kong.
  • Experts are concerned its mutations may help it to avoid antibodies produced by vaccines and treatments.
  • It has been detected 82 times, as of Thursday. For now, it’s being closely monitored. 

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Scientists and health officials are closely tracking a coronavirus variant with a “worrying” number of mutations that has been detected in South Africa, Botswana, and Hong Kong.

The variant, called B.1.1.529, has 32 mutations in the part of the virus that attaches to human cells, called the spike protein — the target for existing vaccines and antibody treatments. A higher number of mutations in the spike protein may change its shape and means there is a greater risk that those vaccines and treatments won’t be effective against it. 

Experts are worried that the mutations might make the virus more infectious and help it avoid the antibody response, but this hasn’t been proven. It’s not yet clear if the mutations make the virus more deadly.

COVID-19 vaccines remain a “critical tool” to protect against severe illness, Tulio de Oliveira, director at South Africa’s centre for epidemic response and innovation, said in a briefing Thursday.

Dr. Tom Peacock, virologist at Imperial College London who posted about the variant on Github Tuesday, said that the high numbers of mutations could be of “real concern” and there were combinations of mutations that he hadn’t seen before in a single variant of the virus that causes COVID-19.

Professor Francois Balloux, director at University College London Genetics Institute, said in a statement to the Science Media Center Wednesday that the large number of mutations that appear to have occurred in a single burst suggest the variant evolved from a chronic infection in an immunocompromised individual. 

B.1.1.529 was first detected on November 11 and has been sequenced 82 times — 77 cases in South Africa, four cases in neighboring Botswana, and one case in Hong Kong. The Hong Kong case was attributed to an individual who had traveled to South Africa, according to South Africa’s National Institute for Communicable Diseases Thursday.

Peacock cautioned that “export to Asia” might suggest that it’s more widespread than the sequences alone imply.

Professor Adrian Puren, acting executive director at NICD, said in a statement Thursday that NICD experts were “working overtime” to understand the new variant and its potential implications. 

Ravi K Gupta, professor of clinical microbiology at Cambridge University said on Twitter Wednesday that the B.1.1.529 variant was “worrying, and I’ve not said that since Delta”.  The highly infectious Delta variant, which is the most common variant worldwide, has 11 to 15 mutations in its spike protein and some of them help it avoid the immune response, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Please get vaccinated and boosted and mask up in public as the mutations in this virus likely result in high level escape from neutralising antibodies,” Gupta said.

Dr. Michelle Groome, head of the division of public health surveillance and response at the NICD, said that individual compliance to preventative measures can have a “great collective impact” in limiting the spread of the new variant. “This means that individuals should get vaccinated, wear masks, practice healthy hand hygiene, maintain social distancing, and gather in well ventilated spaces,” she said. 

The World Health Organization and health officials from South Africa, where most of the cases have been detected, are due to meet to discuss the variant on Friday.

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Germany Covid situation ‘very worrying’ as unvaccinated drive surge in cases

More than 37,000 new infections were reported on Friday, 3,000 more than the mark on Thursday which had, for 24 hours, been the worst rate registered since the pandemic began.

The sharp upward trends come amid a vaccine rollout that is slower than many other large European nations.

Late on Thursday the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), Germany’s disease and control center, described current developments as ”very worrying” and raised its risk assessment for unvaccinated people from “high” to “very high.”

The situation has also changed for vaccinated people, the report said. “For the fully vaccinated, the risk is assessed as moderate, but increasing due to rising infection rates.”

Around 67% of Germans have been fully inoculated against the virus, while a third are either unvaccinated or have received only one dose.

Daily reported Covid-19 cases

Germany’s new wave mirrors a surge of Delta variant cases across Europe, with the situation especially worrying towards the east of the continent, where vaccination coverage is generally lower.

Vienna, the capital of neighboring Austria, announced on Friday it will ban people who are not vaccinated against Covid-19 from cafes, restaurants, hairdressers and any events with more than 25 people starting from the end of next week, as infections surge nationally to their highest level in 2021.

“It is important to me that we take decisions before intensive-care units are at capacity,” Vienna’s mayor Michael Ludwig, a Social Democrat, told reporters at a news conference on Thursday, announcing the new restrictions.

A World Health Organization (WHO) executive said Thursday that Europe’s battle against the virus is a “warning shot” for the rest of the world.

“It’s very important to reflect that Europe represents over half of the global cases in the last week, but that trend can turn,” Mike Ryan, executive director of the agency’s health emergencies program, said in Geneva. “We only have to look at the roller coaster epidemiologic curve to know that when you’re coming down the mountain, you’re usually about to go back up another one.”

“I think it’s a warning shot for the world to see what’s happening in Europe despite the availability of vaccination,” he said. “And I think we all have to double down and recommit ourselves to doing everything we can to be the last person in the chain of transmission.”

The agency’s regional director for Europe had earlier on Thursday outlined out a potentially dire winter for the continent. Hans Kluge warned Europe is “once again the epicenter” of the virus and said that, according to one projection, the region could see 500,000 more deaths by February.

“We are at another critical point of pandemic resurgence,” Kluge said. He blamed two factors for the new wave: the relaxation of Covid-19 measures, and a lack of vaccination coverage in the Balkans and towards the east of the continent.

German Health Minister Jens Spahn on Wednesday warned that stricter measures are needed for those who refuse to get vaccinated. Spahn also told reporters at a press conference on Thursday that he was asked for his vaccination certificate in Rome during the G20 more often in one day than in Germany in four weeks.

Spahn added that Germany was facing a “massive” pandemic among unvaccinated people.

Naomi Thomas contributed to this report.

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US coronavirus: Los Angeles County sees exponential growth in Covid-19 cases as Delta variant becomes dominant, worrying officials

“We do continue to see an uptick in cases and hospitalizations,” Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Thursday. “Deaths, fortunately continue to be relatively low, but as hospitalizations continue to increase we anticipate that deaths might also increase.”

While 60% of those over 16 years old have been fully vaccinated, the case rate in the county jumped from 1.74 cases to 3.5 cases per 100,000 people in one week, according to a news release from the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health.

The overwhelming majority of those testing positive in the county are unvaccinated, representing 99.96% of all new infections, the news release said.

Overall, the state’s Covid-19 positivity rate — the percentage of all tests that are positive — has tripled since California fully reopened last month.

The rate is now surpassing 2% for the first time since early March, after hitting a low of 0.7% in early June, according to new data from the state’s Department of Public Health.

The Delta variant, first detected in India, has been found in 43% of new sequenced samples in California, the state said.

And it also makes up more than 50% of sequenced samples across the country. In some areas, it’s even more, according to Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Although we expected the Delta variant to become the dominant strain in the United States, this rapid rise is troubling,” she said.

In parts of the Midwest and upper Mountain states, CDC data suggest it accounts for about 80% of cases.

“Widespread vaccination is what will truly turn the corner on this pandemic,” Walensky said. “Please know, if you are not vaccinated, you remain susceptible.”

Pfizer says it’s developing a booster shot after seeing waning immunity

Meanwhile, Pfizer announced Thursday it was seeing waning immunity from its vaccine — manufactured in partnership with BioNTech — and was picking up its efforts to develop a booster shot to offer further protection against variants.

“As seen in real world data released from the Israel Ministry of Health, vaccine efficacy in preventing both infection and symptomatic disease has declined six months post-vaccination, although efficacy in preventing serious illnesses remains high,” Pfizer said in a statement emailed to CNN.

Israel’s health ministry said in a statement earlier this week that it had seen efficacy of Pfizer’s vaccine drop from more than 90% to about 64% as the Delta variant spread.

But hours after the Pfizer statement, the FDA and Centers for Disease and Control issued a joint statement saying Americans don’t need booster shots yet.

Dr. William Schaffner, professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, supported the US government’s stance.

“The answer is that our vaccines still are very, very effective in keeping us out of the hospital, in averting severe disease. That’s what they were designed to do,” he told CNN on Thursday. “Now, it’s a bonus if they can also prevent what we call infection. You can get infected, have mild symptoms or no symptoms at all. They diminish that possibility greatly. But they can’t turn it off completely.”

Vaccination gap widens

While experts have long stressed vaccines are our best defense against the pandemic, overall rates have dipped across the US.

Less than half of Americans are fully vaccinated as of Thursday, CDC data shows. And the difference in vaccination rates between Republicans and Democrats has grown over the last two months, a report released Thursday from the Kaiser Family Foundation shows.

Vaccination rates are increasing faster in counties that voted for Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election than in counties that voted for Donald Trump, the new study finds.

The team used data comparing county-wide vaccinations numbers from the CDC with 2020 presidential election results.

In April 2021, counties where most people voted for Trump had an average vaccination rate of 20.6%, compared to 22.8% in counties that went for Biden, the study found. By July 2021, the average vaccination rate in Trump-leaning counties was 35%, and 46.7% in Biden-leaning counties. The gap increased by 9.5 percentage points in under three months.

The researchers said these numbers get at the importance of targeted vaccination efforts that account for partisan opposition.

“A key component of any effort to boost vaccination rates among Republicans will be identifying the right messengers,” the researchers wrote.

“Republicans are most likely to trust their doctors and employers to provide reliable information on COVID-19 vaccines, while government sources are less trusted.”

CNN’s Jamie Gumbrecht, Maggie Fox, Virginia Langmaid and Cheri Mossburg contributed to this report.

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US Coronavirus: Thousands of cases of a worrying variant have been reported in the US. These states have the highest numbers

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported more than 11,500 cases of the variant — but the agency has said the number is likely larger.

“We’ve got a high proportion of variants, and that means coronavirus spreads faster,” Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer told CNN on Wednesday. “These are much more contagious and we’re seeing that whether it is at youth sports or it is the reengagement of some of our restaurants.”

Whitmer said the variants, combined with ongoing pandemic fatigue and more travel, are behind the state’s worrying trends.

New Jersey officials also noted the B.1.1.7 variant as they reported a rise in cases and hospitalizations and warned the numbers could stay high into the summer.

“It is believed that the uptick in cases is due primarily to more contagious variants, for example B.117, the UK variant, coupled with less cautious behaviors,” state health commissioner Judy Persichilli said Wednesday.

New hospitalizations have increased 28% over the past two weeks to more than 2,300 residents, Persichilli said. And between the first and last weeks of March, there was a 31% and 48% increase in the number of hospitalizations among the 20-29 and 40-49 age groups, respectively. Meanwhile older residents have only seen single-digit percent increases, she added.

In Pennsylvania, the University of Pittsburgh is implementing a shelter-in-place period in response to a rise in cases among students and concerns about the presence of the B.1.1.7 variant on campus and in the surrounding area.

“Of significant concern is that the increase in positive cases since the end of last week is now among our residence hall students,” an official university email said.

Fauci: ‘Hang in there a bit longer’

The good news: The vaccines that are being administered across the US appear to protect people well against the B.1.1.7 variant.

But only 16.4% of Americans have been fully vaccinated and a big part of the population remains vulnerable to the virus.

What could help beat another surge while that number climbs are the known safety measures: masking up, avoiding crowds, staying socially distant and regularly washing hands. That’s why experts have urged state and local leaders not to reopen too quickly during this critical time.

“We’re vaccinating about 3 million people a day. Every day that goes by we get closer and closer to a greater degree of protection. So now is just not the time to pull back and declare premature victory,” Dr. Anthony Fauci told CNN on Wednesday.

“Hang in there a bit longer,” he said. “Just hang on, continue to do the public health measures and then we can pull back later, when we get a greater degree of protection from the vaccines.”

But governors and local officials have continued to announce eased restrictions, with several lifting mask mandates.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced Tuesday he was lifting a statewide mask mandate and Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey will also move ahead with her plan to end the state’s mask mandate next week, a spokesperson for the governor told CNN.

New Orleans leaders announced Wednesday they were relaxing restrictions around capacity limits, adding that while the city is seeing improvements in several Covid-19 categories, “concerns remain, especially considering the reversal of trends in several states, as well as the spread of stronger variants that are being detected in several cities in Louisiana.”

Millions more Americans becoming eligible for vaccine

In efforts to get more shots into arms faster, every US state has now expanded or announced plans to expand vaccine eligibility to everyone 16 and up.

Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine is the only one available for use by people who are 16 and older, while the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines are restricted to people 18 and older.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear announced Wednesday everyone 16 and older will be eligible for a vaccine starting Monday.

“We are seeing in a number of states an increase in cases and hospitalizations, and it’s happening among younger people,” the governor said in a statement. “We want to get ahead of the more aggressive COVID-19 variants and make sure that we fill every available appointment.”
In Indiana, which has now expanded eligibility to anyone 16 and up, state officials said they were dropping the proof of residency requirement for vaccines.

The change was made to comply with FEMA vaccination site rules, as well as to accommodate college students who don’t live in the state and people who live with multiple others that might not have proof of residence, state health commissioner Dr. Kristina Box said.

“It’s our preference that individuals who live in Indiana, work in Indiana, are the ones that come over and get vaccinated here because we do get allocated vaccines based on our population, but what we want to do is remove any barriers,” Box said.

Nursing homes see 96% decline in new cases

So far, more than 97 million people — about 29.4% of Americans — have received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, according to CDC data. And more than 54 million — roughly 16.4% — are fully vaccinated.

But already, vaccines are making a difference.

Nursing homes saw a 96% decline in new Covid-19 cases since vaccines started rolling out in December, according to an analysis from the American Health Care Association and the National Center for Assisted Living (AHCA/NCAL).

By March 7, the country’s nursing homes saw the lowest number of weekly Covid-19 cases and deaths since Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services started tracking them, according to the report.

And by that same day, virus-related deaths in nursing homes were down 91% since December.

“We are not out of the woods yet, but these numbers are incredibly encouraging and a major morale booster for frontline caregivers who have been working tirelessly for more than a year to protect our residents,” Mark Parkinson, president and CEO of AHCA/NCAL, said in a news release.

“This trend shows that when long-term care is prioritized, as with the national vaccine rollout, we can protect our vulnerable elderly population,” Parkinson added.

CNN’s Naomi Thomas, Jen Christensen, Anjali Huynh, Alec Snyder, Rebekah Riess, Ganesh Setty and Jacqueline Howard contributed to this report.

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In Oregon, Scientists Find a Virus Variant With a Worrying Mutation

Coronavirus testing at a Virginia Garcia clinic in Hillsboro, Ore., May 1, 2020. (Ruth Fremson/The New York Times)

Scientists in Oregon have spotted a homegrown version of a fast-spreading variant of the coronavirus that first surfaced in Britain — but now it’s combined with a mutation that may make the variant less susceptible to vaccines.

The researchers have so far found just a single case of this formidable combination, but genetic analysis suggested that the variant had been acquired in the community and did not arise in the patient.

“We didn’t import this from elsewhere in the world — it occurred spontaneously,” said Brian O’Roak, a geneticist at Oregon Health and Science University who led the work. He and his colleagues participate in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s effort to track variants, and they have deposited their results in databases shared by scientists.

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The variant originally identified in Britain, called B.1.1.7, has been spreading rapidly across the United States, and accounts for at least 2,500 cases in 46 states. This form of the virus is both more contagious and more deadly than the original version, and it is expected to account for most U.S. infections in a few weeks.

The new version that surfaced in Oregon has the same backbone, but also a mutation — E484K, or “Eek” — seen in variants of the virus circulating in South Africa, Brazil and New York City.

Lab studies and clinical trials in South Africa indicate that the Eek mutation renders the current vaccines less effective by blunting the body’s immune response. (The vaccines still work, but the findings are worrying enough that Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna have begun testing new versions of their vaccines designed to defeat the variant found in South Africa.)

The B.1.1.7 variant with Eek also has emerged in Britain, designated as a “variant of concern” by scientists. But the virus identified in Oregon seems to have evolved independently, O’Roak said.

O’Roak and his colleagues found the variant among coronavirus samples collected by the Oregon State Public Health Lab across the state, including some from an outbreak in a health care setting. Of the 13 test results they analyzed, 10 turned out to be B.1.1.7 alone, and one the combination.

Other experts said the discovery was not surprising, because the Eek mutation has arisen in forms of the virus all over the world. But the mutation’s occurrence in B.1.1.7 is worth watching, they said.

In Britain, this version of the variant accounts for a small number of cases. But by the time the combination evolved there, B.1.1.7 had already spread through the country.

“We’re at the point where B.1.1.7 is just being introduced” into the United States, said Stacia Wyman, an expert in computational genomics at the University of California, Berkeley. “As it evolves, and as it slowly becomes the dominant thing, it could accumulate more mutations.”

Viral mutations may enhance or weaken one another. For example, the variants identified in South Africa and Brazil contain many of the same mutations, including Eek. But the Brazilian version has a mutation, K417N, that is not present in the version from South Africa.

In a study published Thursday in Nature, researchers compared antibody responses to all three variants of concern — the ones identified in Britain, South Africa and Brazil. Consistent with other studies, they found that the variant that pummeled South Africa is most resistant to antibodies produced by the immune system.

But the variant circulating in Brazil was not as resistant, even though it carried the Eek mutation. “If you have the second mutation, you don’t see as bad an effect,” said Michael Diamond, a viral immunologist at Washington University in St. Louis, who led the study.

It’s too early to say whether the variant in Oregon will behave like the ones in South Africa or Brazil. But the idea that other mutations could weaken Eek’s effect is “excellent news,” Wyman said.

Overall, she said, the Oregon finding reinforces the need for people to continue to take precautions, including wearing a mask, until a substantial portion of the population is immunized.

“People need to not freak out but to continue to be vigilant,” she said. “We can’t let down our guard yet while there’s still these more transmissible variants circulating.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

© 2021 The New York Times Company

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Researchers find worrying new coronavirus variant in New York City

Genomics researchers have named the variant B.1.526. It appears in people affected in diverse neighborhoods of New York City, they said, and is “scattered in the Northeast.”

One of the mutations in this variant is the same concerning change found in the variant first seen in South Africa and known as B.1.351. It appears to evade, somewhat, the body’s response to vaccines, as well. And it’s becoming more common.
“We observed a steady increase in the detection rate from late December to mid-February, with an alarming rise to 12.7% in the past two weeks,” one team, at Columbia University Medical Center, write in a report that has yet to be published, although it is scheduled to appear in pre-print version this week.
It’s the latest of a growing number of viral variants that have arisen in the US, which has had more coronavirus cases — 28 million — than any other country and where spread is still intense.

It’s “home grown, presumably in New York,” Dr. David Ho, Director of the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center at Columbia, who led the study team, said by email.

Viruses mutate all the time. The more people who are infected, and the longer they are infected, the more chance the viruses have to change. A patient’s body will be loaded with billions of copies of a virus, and may will be slightly changed, or mutated. Most will come and go.

But sometimes a mutation or pattern of mutations takes hold and gets passed along. If viruses with such patterns become more common, they’re called variants. Again, it’s not unusual for variants to arise but if they give the virus worrying properties, such as better transmissibility or the ability to evade treatments and vaccines, that’s when doctors start to worry.

The mutation in this variant that most concerns researchers is called E484K and it gives the virus the ability to slip past some of the body’s immune response, as well as the authorized monoclonal antibody treatments. This mutation is popping up independently in many different cases but appears in one particular variant, as well — the one called B.1.526.

“It is this novel variant that is surging, alarmingly, in our patient population over the past few weeks,” the Columbia team wrote in a copy of their report provided to CNN.

“We find the rate of detection of this new variant is going up over the past few weeks. A concern is that it might be beginning to overtake other strains, just like the UK and South African variants,” Ho told CNN.

“However, we don’t have enough data to firm up this point now.”

But the E484K mutation is seen in at least 59 different lineages of coronavirus, they said — which means it is evolving independently across the nation and across the world in a phenomenon known as convergent evolution. It may give the virus an advantage.

“Everything we know about this key mutation suggests that it appears to escape from antibody pressure,” Ho said.

Separately, a team at the California Institute of Technology said they developed a software tool that also spotted the rise of B.1.526 in New York. “It appears that the frequency of lineage B.1.526 has increased rapidly in New York,” they wrote in a pre-print — a report that has not been peer-reviewed but has been posted online.

On Tuesday, two teams reported on another variant that appears to be on the rise in California.

They fear that the variant might not only be more contagious, but may cause more severe disease, as well. As with the New York reports, their research is in its very early stages, has not been published or peer reviewed, and needs more work.

A team at the University of California, San Francisco, tested virus samples from recent outbreaks across California and found it was becoming far more common. It wasn’t seen in any samples from September but by the end of January it was found in half the samples.

This variant, which the team calls B.1.427/B.1.429, has a different pattern of mutations than the variants first seen in the UK, called B.1.1.7 or B.1.351. One mutation, called L452R, affects the spike protein of the virus, which is the bit that attaches to cells the virus infects.

“One specific mutation, the L452R mutation, in the receptor-binding domain of the spike protein may enable the virus to dock more efficiently to cells. Our data shows that this is likely the key mutation that makes this variant more infectious,” Dr. Charles Chiu, associate director of the clinical microbiology lab at UCSF, who led one of the studies, told CNN.

And they found some evidence it is more dangerous. “In this study, we observed increased severity of disease associated with B.1.427/B.1.429 infection, including increased risk of high oxygen requirement,” they wrote in their report, which is to post to a pre-print server later this week after public health officials in San Francisco review it.

Chiu said it should be designated a variant of concern and should be made a priority for study.

A second team at Unidos en Salud, a San Francisco-based nonprofit offering fast testing in San Francisco’s Mission District, tested 8,846 people over the month of January and sequenced the virus from 630 of the samples. They also found a rapid increase in the variant.

“The research findings indicate that the L452R variant represents 53% of the positive test samples collected between January 10th and the 27th. That is a significant increase from November when our sequencing indicated that this variant comprised only 16% of the positive tests,” Dr. Diane Havlir, an infectious diseases expert at UCSF who is helping lead the study, said in a statement.

Havlir’s team is also preparing findings for publication.

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