Bristol Covid variant could reinfect vaccinated Britons, SAGE expert warns

Coronavirus infections must plummet to fewer than 10,000 cases before Boris Johnson should start easing brutal lockdown restrictions, a Sage adviser has warned. 

Pushing back against growing calls for Britain to exit draconian curbs soon Sir Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust, said there were still 750,000 cases in Britain – 75 times more than he says they should be.

‘Transmission is still incredibly high in the UK. If transmission were still at this level and we were not in lockdown, we would be going into lockdown,’ he said. ‘We’ve got to get it lower, we’ve got to get it – in my view – into the single thousands before we can possibly think of lifting restrictions.’

He added it was ‘not sensible’ for ministers to set a date for lifting restrictions, warning they must be led by the data in order to avoid a third major infections spike.

In a further blow to hopes measures could be relaxed by the summer, Sage scientist Professor John Edmunds warned most curbs on Britons daily life such as the Rule of Six are likely to be in force until the end of this year, while less restrictive curbs like face mask wearing on public transport and indoors possibly in place ‘forever’. 

The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine epidemiologist issued the stark warning as he suggested a variant of the virus detected in Bristol had the ‘potential’ to reinfect vaccinated Britons.

He said it could be ‘very dangerous’ to the UK’s mammoth jab drive if the mutant strain was allowed to spread around the country.

Public Health England has so far identified 21 cases, with 14 in Bristol, four in Manchester and three ‘scattered’ across the rest of the UK. 

The strain is an evolved version of the Kent variant – the dominant variant in the UK – which has mutated further to develop a change first found on the South African strain that makes vaccines slightly less effective.

The alteration, scientifically known as E484K, is thought to play a key role in helping the strains ‘hide’ from the immune system.  

Top experts, however, insist immunity from the jabs should still be enough to prevent mutant strains causing severe illness — even if they don’t block people becoming ill again.

It comes after the Health Secretary Matt Hancock today raised the prospect of an ‘easier’ exit from lockdown because Britons are flocking to get Covid jabs in ‘incredible numbers’.

He said uptake of the vaccine had been ‘far, far higher’ than expected, with more than 90 per cent of all those in the top priority groups coming forward to get their first dose. 

Sir Jeremy Farrar, a member of Sage, warns the UK's cases need to drop 75 times before restrictions can be eased, in a blow to hopes the lockdown could end soon

SAGE scientist Professor John Edmunds has warned the coronavirus variant first detected in Bristol has the 'potential' to reinfect vaccinated Britons

Sir Jeremy Farrar, a member of Sage, warns the UK’s cases need to drop 75 times before restrictions can be eased, in a blow to hopes the lockdown could end soon. SAGE scientist Professor John Edmunds has warned the coronavirus variant first detected in Bristol has the ‘potential’ to reinfect vaccinated Britons

There are now six variants of coronavirus being investigated by Public Health England, five of which have already been found in the UK

There are now six variants of coronavirus being investigated by Public Health England, five of which have already been found in the UK

MATT HANCOCK SAYS COVID-19 VACCINE UPTAKE HAS BEEN ‘INCREDIBLE’ 

Matt Hancock said Britain was on course for an 'easier' exit from lockdown because of the swift uptake

Matt Hancock said Britain was on course for an ‘easier’ exit from lockdown because of the swift uptake

Britain is on course for an ‘easier’ exit from gruelling lockdown measures because of the high coronavirus vaccines uptake, Matt Hancock has said.

The Health Secretary revealed today the Government feared only around three-quarters of Britons who were eligible would turn up to get the jab.

But he said the response had been ‘incredible’ with more than 90 per cent turning up for their first dose, and had been above 96 per cent for those aged 75 to 79.

Top epidemiologists have warned uptake needs to be at at least 85 per cent to achieve herd immunity, which is when a virus stops spreading in a community because enough people have protection.

‘The assumption we had going into the vaccine programme was 75 per cent of people would take the jab, and we’re now well over 90 per cent,’ he told BBC Breakfast.

‘So that has gone far better than my most optimistic projections, and I’m quite an optimistic kind of guy.

‘That has gone really very well and that of course does make it easier safely for us together to come out of this.

‘The difference between say 80 per cent of people taking this up and 90 per cent is that you actually halve from 20 to 10 the number of people who are unprotected.

‘These extra few percentages really, really matter because they reduce the number of people who are not protected.’

Department of Health figures show 13million Britons have already received their first dose – as the Government speeds towards its target of getting jabs to the top priority groups by mid-February.

But there have been mounting calls for ministers to speed up the programme further, after the figures for Monday showed the number of people who got the jab rose just one per cent compared to last week.

Critics caution that not a single second of the remaining six weeks before second doses have to be administered should be wasted. 

It comes as in another day of coronavirus news:

  • Top UK scientist claims the more infectious Kent variant of the virus is going to ‘sweep the world’ after it was already spotted in 50 different countries;
  • Tory MPs vent their fury over threat to holidays as Matt Hancock says ‘nothing is certain’ and ministers urge Britons not to book trips;
  • Boris Johnson urges vulnerable people who are still waiting for their Covid-19 vaccine to come forward;
  • Government sparks fury after advising that playgrounds are only for people without gardens;
  • Estimates reveal that if Britain followed Israel’s plans to get out of lockdown restrictions would not be lifted until late May at the earliest;
  • Matt Hancock pledges to make health service ‘better’ after pandemic with ‘bureaucracy busting’ reforms merging hospitals, GPs and social care; 
  • Paramedic is left ‘heartbroken’ after her handbag is stolen from her ambulance at the end of a 10-hour shift on the Covid frontline.

Sir Farrar issued the stark warning that lockdown could drag on for months while speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

‘I appreciate that businesses have to plan and everything else,’ he said, ‘but the data has to drive us, and in 2020 we lifted restrictions too quickly when the data would not really have allowed that and, frankly, as a result the transmission went back up in this country.’

He added: ‘We’ve made enormous progress – the UK deserves great credit for the science behind the vaccines and the rollout, (with) 30million people now vaccinated in this country.

‘But the transmission rate is incredibly high still and we’ve got to get it lower, we’ve got to get it – in my view – into the single thousands before we can possibly think of lifting restrictions.’

It is not clear how the figure of 750,000 infections in the UK was calculated, but it is thought to be based on the ONS estimates of cases across the country.

They said there were 846,900 in England and 42,700 in Wales during the seven days to January 30, the latest for which data is available.

The ex-Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt called for the Government to keep harsh curbs in place until it was recording 1,000 cases a day last week.

Department of Health figures show 13,013 new infections were identified on February 10, and 113,336 were found this week alone. 

Professor Edmunds insisted there was no reason to believe the Bristol variant is any more infectious than the Kent one, so it was not an immediate threat. But he claimed the ‘real worry’ was that, as millions more people get vaccinated and the Kent strain is suppressed, the new variant could have an evolutionary edge.

Professor Edmunds also said Britain’s borders would need to remain ‘pretty tight’ and people would need to be ‘very cautious’ when travelling abroad to avoid importing even more strains that could undermine the vaccine programme.

In a more positive sign, the SAGE scientist said he believes Britain will be ‘more or less free’ of lockdown measures by the end of this year.

But he warned some of the less-restrictive curbs, like social distancing or occasional mask-use, could be here ‘forever’.

Scientists believe coronavirus will now be an endemic disease that countries have to grapple with every winter.

The Bristol variant is the third variant of concern found in Britain, alongside the now-dominant Kent variant and the South African one. A fourth – one of two strains from Brazil – is also listed by PHE but it has not yet been found in the UK. 

The E484K mutation appears to give the SARS-CoV-2 virus the ability to partially evade natural and vaccine-triggered immunity.

This mutation initially appears randomly – and it appears to do so fairly often – but sometimes becomes a permanent feature of a variant because it gives it an advantage in that it can reinfect people who would be protected against other versions of the virus.

Ministers have already put dreams of a summer break abroad in jeopardy, with the introduction of draconian border controls backed by the threat of ten-year prison sentences for those who try to cheat the system. Pictured: Tourists flocking to the seaside in Benidorm, Spain, in July 2015. Scenes like this are unlikely to be allowed this year

Ministers have already put dreams of a summer break abroad in jeopardy, with the introduction of draconian border controls backed by the threat of ten-year prison sentences for those who try to cheat the system. Pictured: Tourists flocking to the seaside in Benidorm, Spain, in July 2015. Scenes like this are unlikely to be allowed this year

KENT COVID VARIANT MAY BE COME MOST DOMINANT IN THE WORLD, ACCORDING TO A TOP EXPERT

Professor Sharon Peacock from the Covid-19 Genomics UK (Cog-UK) Consortium said the variant has been detected in more than 50 countries and 'it's going to sweep the world'

Professor Sharon Peacock from the Covid-19 Genomics UK (Cog-UK) Consortium said the variant has been detected in more than 50 countries and ‘it’s going to sweep the world’

The Kent coronavirus variant may become the most dominant strain in the world, the director of the UK’s genetic surveillance programme claimed today.

More than 50 countries have already spotted the mutant B.1.1.7 strain, which evolved to become more infectious than the original virus. 

Professor Sharon Peacock, head of the Covid-19 Genomics UK (Cog-UK) Consortium said the variant ‘is going to sweep the world, in all probability’.

It is already the dominant strain across the UK but all the evidence suggests current vaccines work against it. 

But there are fears the variant has started to mutate further to become more like the one that evolved in South Africa, which is better able to resist immunity developed by past infection or from the current vaccines.

Professor Peacock said her work sequencing variants could be needed for at least 10 years.

The fact that the variant cases have been discovered during lockdown, said PHE’s Dr Susan Hopkins, was a cause for immediate action because it presented an opportunity to control them while people are not mixing much.

While none of the variants of concern look to be spreading fast out of the areas where they were first discovered, this could change when rules are eased.

Coronavirus swab testing has been scaled up in various parts of England where the worrying variants of the virus have been found.

Neighbourhoods are being visited by officials bearing test kits and walk-through centres have been set up for people with no symptoms in most regions.

The testing is happening in Walsall and Worcestershire in the Midlands, Broxbourne in East Anglia, Maidstone in Kent, Southport in the North West, and in Bristol in the South West.

In London the ‘surge testing’ is being done in Hanwell, Tottenham, Mitcham and Lambeth.

Although ministers and health officials believe they can get on top of the variant cases with this surge testing and more rigorous contact tracing during lockdown, scientists have warned that the cases they’re finding are only the ‘tip of the iceberg’.

COG-UK only examines around 10 per cent of positive tests to find out which variant they were caused by.

This suggests that the number of cases of each variant that they find could be multiplied by around ten to get to a more accurate number. 

Meanwhile, the original Kent strain is on track to become the world’s dominant strain, according to Professor Sharon Peacock from the Covid-19 Genomics UK (Cog-UK) Consortium.

That variant, which is between 50 and 70 per cent more infectious than the original Covid that came out of China, quickly became the dominant one in the UK after emerging in late September. It accounts for about 90 per cent of new infections in Britain.

The Kent variant was responsible for a wave of infections and hospital admissions which plunged the UK into its third national lockdown. 

And the strain has been detected in more than 50 countries already, which is probably an underestimate because most nations do not have the capacity to analyse the genetic structure of the virus. 

Professor Peacock, who is also an expert in public health and microbiology at the University of Cambridge, said transmissibility of the Kent version was likely to cause scientists difficulties for years to come.

‘Once we get on top of it [Covid-19] or it mutates itself out of being virulent – causing disease – then we can stop worrying about it,’she said.

‘But I think, looking in the future, we’re going to be doing this for years. We’re still going to be doing this 10 years down the line, in my view.’

Despite data suggesting the mutant variant may be more deadly, there is no evidence to indicate existing treatments, such as dexamethasone, will not be effective against it.

A study has suggested that people infected with the UK variant are less likely to report a loss of taste and smell.

There are now four ‘variants of concern’ of the virus that causes Covid-19 identified by government advisers, three of these have been found in the UK, and the fourth is the Brazil variant identified in people who had travelled to Japan.

Analysis is ongoing to establish the impact of these mutations on the virus.

The number of patients waiting more than a year for surgery hit the highest levels since April 2008 in December, NHS England figures published today show

The number of patients waiting more than a year for surgery hit the highest levels since April 2008 in December, NHS England figures published today show

The number of patients on NHS waiting lists hit 4.52million in December, the highest number since records began in August 2007

The number of patients on NHS waiting lists hit 4.52million in December, the highest number since records began in August 2007

‘I AM VIRTUALLY HOUSEBOUND’: FORMER CARE WORKER, 71, WAITING FOR HIP SURGERY SINCE MARCH

Chris, who was diagnosed with arthritis in his right hip in 2018, has been left 'virtually housebound'

Chris, who was diagnosed with arthritis in his right hip in 2018, has been left ‘virtually housebound’

A former care worker, 71, had his hip replacement surgery cancelled two days before in March last year due to Covid-19 and was told he had been taken off the waiting list in December.

Chris, who was diagnosed with arthritis in his right hip in 2018, has been left ‘virtually housebound’ because of the constant ‘excessive pain’. 

He will now have to go through the whole process again starting with a consultation despite suffering for the last three years.

‘My mobility is nearly zero as a result of the excessive pain,’ Chris explained.

‘It never stops; it is just constant. I’m now using two crutches to get anywhere and am virtually housebound. 

‘I can’t drive or even get into a car and have needed adaptations in the house to help me get up and move around. It’s the simple things.’

He described how the hospital confirmed his fears that he had been removed from the waiting list on December 3, adding: ‘It really does look quite helpless.’

‘I now have to go through the whole process again, starting with a consultation with a surgeon.’ 

Speaking about the toll on his mental health, Chris added: ‘I get no communication from the hospital and I have been suffering in pain for the last three years, so I really understand now how depression can set in. 

‘I’m fortunate enough to have a supportive family but there will be many others suffering in silence alone, this pandemic is affecting far more people than those unfortunate enough to catch the virus.’

The number of patients waiting more than a year for routine operations on the NHS has hit its highest level since April 2008, official figures showed today.

Almost 225,000 people had went at least 52 weeks without treatment in December, according to NHS England.

For comparison, the figure was below 2,000 for almost every month in 2019, before Britain’s health service was slammed by the first wave of the Covid pandemic. 

Surgeons today warned tens of thousands of patients waiting to be seen will be in excruciating pain and be unable to get on with ‘day-to-day family life or work’.

Leading medics said the shocking data revealed the ‘enormous toll’ of coronavirus on the health service, and said they really ‘hit home what shape the NHS is in and how long the road to recovery is going to be’.

Separate NHS data today also showed the number of A&E attendances is still below levels last year, with thousands choosing to stay away from hospitals over fears of catching coronavirus. 

Despite the gloomy figures laying bare exactly how much the NHS struggled during the second wave, the number of Covid patients in hospitals is still falling rapidly.  

Department of Health figures show there were almost 27,000 infected Brits needing hospital care on February 8, the most recent day figures are available for. In contrast, the figure almost topped 40,000 during the darkest days of January.

But there are still more coronavirus patients on wards than during the worst spell of the first wave.

The shocking figures come after health bosses yesterday warned waits of more than a year for treatment will become a staple moving forward due to the damage done by the winter Covid wave.

In a letter to the Prime Minister, the NHS Confederation claimed people should not expect non-Covid care to rebound as quickly as it did last summer following the first peak.

It urged the Government to have ‘an honest conversation’ with the public about the future, warning that patients can expect to be waiting over 12 months for routine operations ‘for some years’.

NHS figures published today also showed there were 4.52million patients on the main waiting list, the highest number since records began in August 2007. 

And they revealed the total number of people admitted for routine operations fell 25 per cent in December, compared to a year earlier. 

Some 190,604 NHS patients received treatment during the month, down from 253,318 at the same time last year. 

A total of 1.3million attendances were recorded in January 2021, down 38 per cent from the same time last year when there were 2.1million visits. 

The vice president of the Royal College of Surgeons, Tim Mitchell, warned Covid-19 continues to inflict an ‘enormous toll’ on hundreds of thousands of people who are waiting for operations.

‘The number of people waiting over a year for their treatment is now 150 times higher than in 2019,’ he said.

‘Many are waiting “in limbo”, reliant on painkillers, and unable to get on with day-to-day family life or work.

‘These figures show the impact on the NHS of lifting the November national lockdown. 

‘By Christmas some surgeons were facing the awful job of calling up patients waiting for cancer operations, to tell them they weren’t sure when they would have a bed or the staff in place to operate.’ 

He added: ‘After a gruelling December, we’re beginning to see infection rates coming down in parts of the country, thanks to the January lockdown. 

‘However, many staff are burnt-out from what has been a brutal and traumatic year. They will need time and support to recover. 

‘Looking ahead to spring, we need a “New Deal for Surgery” with investment in hospital beds and staff, to begin to address the massive backlog of patients still waiting for their operations.’

National medical director for the NHS, Professor Stephen Powis, said doctors and nurses had worked ‘extremely hard’ under enormous pressure to deliver vital services to patients. 

‘Even in January, when hospitals admitted almost a third of all the Covid patients they have treated during the pandemic, they were treating twice as many patients with other conditions as they did for those with the virus over the month,’ he said. 

‘But the NHS remains under significant pressure so it is vital that everyone continues to do all they can to stop the spread of the virus by staying at home and following the expert ‘hands, face, space’ guidance.’

An NHS spokesman added that there was also a 40 per cent fall in waiting times for non-urgent care.

source: dailymail.co.uk