Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care (Jan 2022)

Comparative study of clinical features and vaccination status in Omicron and non-Omicron infected patients during the third wave in Mumbai, India

  • Apurva Takke,
  • Mohini Zarekar,
  • Vigneshwaran Muthuraman,
  • Aditee Ashar,
  • Kranti Patil,
  • Anagha Badhavkar,
  • Jayshil Trivedi,
  • Naveen Khargekar,
  • Manisha Madkaikar,
  • Anindita Banerjee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_430_22
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
pp. 6135 – 6142

Abstract

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Objectives: The Omicron variant–mediated COVID-19 wave is responsible for a global tsunami of cases. There is scarce data about the clinical and epidemiological characteristic analyses of the third wave. We present the data of COVID-19 patients from Mumbai region during the early third wave by taking S-gene target failure (SGTF) as a proxy for probable Omicron cases. Methods: We collected retrospective data of RT-PCR-confirmed (COVID-19) patients, and measured the proportion of possible Omicron cases by SGTF. We segregated and analyzed the clinical and lab data of patients with outcomes such as differing symptoms, vaccination coverage, previous infection, and travel history. We also performed a trend analysis of Mumbai's COVID-19 data before and during the third wave. Results: All patients had mild clinical symptoms while few were asymptomatic. Myalgia was more significantly present in SGTF/Omicron cases compared to non-SGTF/Delta patients. Out of the total 101 COVID-positive individuals, 94 individuals (93%) had taken two doses of COVID vaccine. Among these 94 individuals, 9 (8.9%) had been previously infected with COVID 19 in the first or second waves. 77.7% of the previously infected were now infected with Omicron variant and only 22.3% by a non-Omicron variant. Conclusion: Rapid rise and fall during the third wave in Mumbai was due to Omicron cases gradually replacing Delta. The overall milder clinical spectrum in both Omicron and Delta cases imply that vaccines might not be effective against re-infection but can attenuate disease severity and mortality, as evident by high coverage of vaccination in the country.

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