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Clinical Characterization and Genomic Analysis of Samples from COVID-19 Breakthrough Infections during the Second Wave among the Various States of India

From March to June 2021, India experienced a deadly second wave of COVID-19, with an increased number of post-vaccination breakthrough infections reported across the country. To understand the possible reason for these breakthroughs, we collected 677 clinical samples (throat swab/nasal swabs) of ind...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gupta, Nivedita, Kaur, Harmanmeet, Yadav, Pragya Dhruv, Mukhopadhyay, Labanya, Sahay, Rima R., Kumar, Abhinendra, Nyayanit, Dimpal A., Shete, Anita M., Patil, Savita, Majumdar, Triparna, Rana, Salaj, Gupta, Swati, Narayan, Jitendra, Vijay, Neetu, Barde, Pradip, Nataraj, Gita, B., Amrutha Kumari, Kumari, Manasa P., Biswas, Debasis, Iravane, Jyoti, Raut, Sharmila, Dutta, Shanta, Devi, Sulochana, Barua, Purnima, Gupta, Piyali, Borkakoty, Biswa, Kalita, Deepjyoti, Dhingra, Kanwardeep, Fomda, Bashir, Joshi, Yash, Goyal, Kapil, John, Reena, Munivenkatappa , Ashok, Dhodapkar, Rahul, Pandit, Priyanka, Devi, Sarada, Dudhmal, Manisha, Kinariwala, Deepa, Khandelwal, Neeta, Tiwari, Yogendra Kumar, Khatri, Prabhat Kiran, Gupta, Anjli, Khatri, Himanshu, Malhotra, Bharti, Nagasundaram, Mythily, Dar, Lalit, Sheikh, Nazira, Shastri, Jayanthi, Aggarwal, Neeraj, Abraham, Priya
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8472862/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34578363
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v13091782
Descripción
Sumario:From March to June 2021, India experienced a deadly second wave of COVID-19, with an increased number of post-vaccination breakthrough infections reported across the country. To understand the possible reason for these breakthroughs, we collected 677 clinical samples (throat swab/nasal swabs) of individuals from 17 states/Union Territories of the country who had received two doses (n = 592) and one dose (n = 85) of vaccines and tested positive for COVID-19. These cases were telephonically interviewed and clinical data were analyzed. A total of 511 SARS-CoV-2 genomes were recovered with genome coverage of higher than 98% from both groups. Analysis of both groups determined that 86.69% (n = 443) of them belonged to the Delta variant, along with Alpha, Kappa, Delta AY.1, and Delta AY.2. The Delta variant clustered into four distinct sub-lineages. Sub-lineage I had mutations in ORF1ab A1306S, P2046L, P2287S, V2930L, T3255I, T3446A, G5063S, P5401L, and A6319V, and in N G215C; Sub-lineage II had mutations in ORF1ab P309L, A3209V, V3718A, G5063S, P5401L, and ORF7a L116F; Sub-lineage III had mutations in ORF1ab A3209V, V3718A, T3750I, G5063S, and P5401L and in spike A222V; Sub-lineage IV had mutations in ORF1ab P309L, D2980N, and F3138S and spike K77T. This study indicates that majority of the breakthrough COVID-19 clinical cases were infected with the Delta variant, and only 9.8% cases required hospitalization, while fatality was observed in only 0.4% cases. This clearly suggests that the vaccination does provide reduction in hospital admission and mortality.