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It takes a lot for a COVID-19 variant to become dominant throughout most of the world. It has happened only three previous times (alpha, delta, omicron) and now is occurring with the omicron family subvariant known as BA.5. How did this occur and what are the implications for the pandemic going forward?
In the last weeks BA.5 became the dominant COVID-19 variant in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and is the cause of nearly 54% of new cases, growing exponentially here since late April. It replaced another omicron family variant (BA.2.12.1), which has not achieved global dominance. But we are seeing BA.5, first appearing in South Africa and Portugal, now progressing to or achieving dominance throughout much of Europe, South America and the Asia Pacific. It has led to new infection surges and an increase in hospitalizations but, fortunately, not a proportionate increase in deaths or admissions to intensive care units.
The reason BA.5 is a standout is predominantly linked to its property of "immune escape." That is, multiple distinct mutations from prior omicron variants have blunted our immune response to it. The ability of multiple vaccine doses, boosters and infections to guard against it is reduced.
BA.5 doesn't completely evade our defenses — there is some cross-immunity that is enabled by vaccines and prior infections, reflected in sustained protection from the most severe COVID-19 illness. But a jump in reinfections reflects our vulnerability.
BA.5 may have other "advantages" as well. Researchers in Australia just reported higher infectivity for this variant compared with prior omicron versions, by virtue of its ability to enter cells more efficiently.
The rise of the BA.5 variant is an outgrowth of accelerated evolution of the virus. The transition from omicron BA.1, first picked up spreading in late November 2021, to BA.5 now, with many other omicron subvariants in between, is quite rapid and unlike the first year of the pandemic when there were no substantive new versions of the virus seen. BA.5 puts the nail in the coffin of the myth that the virus will evolve into a milder form and fade away. We could easily see more variants — indeed a whole new family with more extensive immune evasion and growth advantage — in the months ahead.