Viruses (Jan 2023)

Omicron Waves in Argentina: Dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 Lineages BA.1, BA.2 and the Emerging BA.2.12.1 and BA.4/BA.5

  • Carolina Torres,
  • Mercedes Nabaes Jodar,
  • Dolores Acuña,
  • Romina Micaela Zambrana Montaño,
  • Andrés Carlos Alberto Culasso,
  • Ariel Fernando Amadio,
  • Paula Aulicino,
  • Santiago Ceballos,
  • Marco Cacciabue,
  • Humberto Debat,
  • María José Dus Santos,
  • María Florencia Eberhardt,
  • Carlos Espul,
  • Fabián Fay,
  • María Ailén Fernández,
  • Franco Fernández,
  • Juan Manuel Fernandez Muñoz,
  • Florencia Ferrini,
  • Fernando Gallego,
  • Adriana Angélica Giri,
  • Agustina Cerri,
  • Elisa Bolatti,
  • María Ines Gismondi,
  • Stephanie Goya,
  • Iván Gramundi,
  • José Matías Irazoqui,
  • Guido Alberto König,
  • Viviana Leiva,
  • Horacio Lucero,
  • Nathalie Marquez,
  • Cristina Nardi,
  • Belén Ortiz,
  • Luis Pianciola,
  • Carolina Beatriz Pintos,
  • Andrea Fabiana Puebla,
  • Carolina Victoria Rastellini,
  • Alejandro Ezequiel Rojas,
  • Javier Sfalcin,
  • Ariel Suárez,
  • Estefanía Tittarelli,
  • Rosana Toro,
  • Gabriela Vanina Villanova,
  • María Cecilia Ziehm,
  • María Carla Zimmermann,
  • Sebastián Zunino,
  • Proyecto PAIS Working Group,
  • Laura Valinotto,
  • Mariana Viegas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v15020312
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
p. 312

Abstract

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The COVID-19 pandemic has lately been driven by Omicron. This work aimed to study the dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron lineages during the third and fourth waves of COVID-19 in Argentina. Molecular surveillance was performed on 3431 samples from Argentina, between EW44/2021 and EW31/2022. Sequencing, phylogenetic and phylodynamic analyses were performed. A differential dynamic between the Omicron waves was found. The third wave was associated with lineage BA.1, characterized by a high number of cases, very fast displacement of Delta, doubling times of 3.3 days and a low level of lineage diversity and clustering. In contrast, the fourth wave was longer but associated with a lower number of cases, initially caused by BA.2, and later by BA.4/BA.5, with doubling times of about 10 days. Several BA.2 and BA.4/BA.5 sublineages and introductions were detected, although very few clusters with a constrained geographical distribution were observed, suggesting limited transmission chains. The differential dynamic could be due to waning immunity and an increase in population gatherings in the BA.1 wave, and a boosted population (for vaccination or recent prior immunity for BA.1 infection) in the wave caused by BA2/BA.4/BA.5, which may have limited the establishment of the new lineages.

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