Investigation of novel SARS-CoV-2 variant

SOCAIL MEDIA

This briefing provides an update on previous briefings up to 11 March 2021

Summary

• There are 4 variants of concern and 6 variants under investigation (Table 1). Definitions for variants of concern, variants under investigation and signals in monitoring have been updated. VOC-20DEC-01 (B.1.1.7) remains predominant. Other variants of concern and variants under investigation remain a very low proportion of the available sequence data. Mutation prevalence data show a decrease in the proportion of sequences with N439K over time and an increase in E484K. Enhanced investigations including secondary attack rates, spatial risk mapping, and growth rates of each variant are provided for the first time. Numbers of all variants under investigation remain low and estimates have low certainty. An updated clinical risk assessment for VOC-20DEC-02 (B.1.351) is provided.

Variant information

The collection page gives content on variants, including prior technical briefings. Updated definition for variants of concern, variants under investigation and signals in monitoring Updated case definitions have been applied as of 29 March 2021. Variant of concern Variant demonstrated to be associated with: • an increase in transmissibility or other detrimental change in epidemiology, and/or • an increase in virulence or change in clinical disease presentation, and/or • escape from immunity derived from natural infection, and/or • a decrease in effectiveness of public health or clinical countermeasures including: o vaccination o treatment in current clinical use o testing if the impact is such that it is not easily mitigated by standard laboratory quality and regulatory measures Variant under investigation Variant demonstrated to be associated with: • variant with mutations for which there is high confidence predictive data, or laboratory data, supporting significant adverse phenotypic change, but which do not meet the definition of a variant of concern and • evidence of community transmission in the UK or abroad Signal in monitoring Signals arise from horizon scanning and may be placed in monitoring if they do not meet the definition of a VUI or VOC but are considered worth further investigation. Examples of signals which are placed in monitoring: • up to 5 importations to the UK with the same mutations associated with adverse phenotypic change, but no evidence of UK or international community transmission (for example, a single household, imports only) or • lineage with apparently high growth rate or prevalence in UK or abroad but with no or inconclusive data on significance of mutations or • lineage where an international alert has been raised but data are incomplete and further data are expected or • as designated by the Horizon Scanning Group Single unusual genomes developing in individuals who are immunocompromised or have prolonged shedding will not be monitored or escalated unless there is evidence of community transmission. De-escalation A variant of concern may be de-escalated if the evidence base changes so that it no longer meets the phenotypic criteria, or if the affected countermeasure is no longer in use or superseded (for example, an updated vaccine is available). A variant under investigation may be de-escalated if laboratory or clinical data indicates that it is unlikely to have the suspected phenotype (for example, if it contains mutations containing for antigenic escape but laboratory data shows no reduced neutralisation activity of convalescent and vaccinee sera). Extinction Either a variant of concern or variant under investigation will be considered provisionally extinct if it has not been detected in any dataset for 12 weeks. Scanning of national and international datasets will continue.

Variant status and numbers

Table 1 shows the current variants of concern and variants under investigation (including new simplified naming convention as of 16 March 2021). Summary epidemiology on each variant is shown in Table 2 (case numbers are also updated online Case numbers on variants of concern (VOC) and variants under investigation (VUI).
Table 1. Variant lineage, designation and status as of 31 March 2021
Lineage Prior designation (VOC/VUI) Designation as of 16 March 2021 First detected in sequence from Status
B.1.1.7 VOC 202012/01 VOC-20DEC01 UK VOC
B.1.351 VOC 202012/02 VOC-20DEC02 South Africa VOC
P1 VOC 202101/02 VOC-21JAN02 Japan ex Brazil VOC
B1.1.7 with E484K VOC 202102/02 VOC-21FEB02 UK VOC
P2 VUI 202101/01 VUI-21JAN-01 Brazil VUI
A.23.1 with E484K VUI 202102/01 VUI-21FEB-01 UK VUI
B.1.525 VUI 202102/03 VUI-21FEB-03 UK VUI
B.1.1.318 VUI 202102/04 VUI-21FEB-04 UK England VUI
B.1.324.1 with E484K VUI 202103/01 VUI-21MAR-01 UK VUI
P3 VUI 202103/02 VUI-21MAR-02 Philippines VUI
B.1.429 California USA Monitoring
B.1.1.7 with S494P UK Monitoring
A.27 France (Mayotte) Monitoring
B.1.526 New York USA Monitoring
B.1.1.7 with Q677H UK Monitoring
B.1 with E484Q and L452R India Monitoring
B.1 with E484K and S477N Under review Monitoring
 

Variant prevalence

Variant prevalence for all available case data is presented in Figure 1 and Figure 2 that show that the predominant variant at this time is VOC-20DEC-01 and other variants of concern and under investigation represent a low proportion of available sequences. The Other category in Figure 1 and Figure 2 includes genomes where the quality is insufficient to determine variant status and genomes that do not meet the current definition for any designated variant under investigation or variant of concern. The supplementary data for figures is available here. Figure 1. Variant prevalence for all England available case data from 1 February 2021 to 21 March 2021. (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F1. Figure 2. Variant prevalence for all England available case data from 1 February 2021 to 21 March 2021 excluding VOC20DEC-01.(Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F2.

Antigenic change mutation monitoring

Mutations potentially associated with antigenic change are monitored as part of horizon scanning. Figure 3 shows the proportion of these mutations over time in the all England genomic dataset, illustrating the decline of N439K and an increase in E484K. Only those mutations which were present at a count of > 50 within the 6 month time frame are shown. The supplementary data for figures is available here. Figure 3. Proportion of mutations conferring antigenic change over time from 1 September 2020 to 16 March 2021. (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F3.

Case numbers, proportion, deaths and case fatality rate

The number of cases of variants of concern and variant under investigation are shown in Table 2, including the proportion of variant cases compared to all sequenced cases, deaths and case fatality rate.
Table 2. Case number, proportion, death and case fatality rate of variants of concern and variant under investigation from 1 October 2020 to 31 March 2021
Variant Case Numbera Case Proportionb Deathsc Case Fatality
VOC-20DEC-01 151,344 99.37% 3,504 2.3%
VOC-20DEC-02 410 0.27% 9 2.2%
VOC-21FEB-02 43 0.028% 1 2.3%
VOC-21JAN-02 27 0.018% 0 0.0%
VUI-21FEB-01 78 0.051% 1 1.3%
VUI-21FEB-03 277 0.18% 12 4.3%
VUI-21FEB-04 72 0.047% 0 0.0%
VUI-21JAN-01 53 0.035% 1 1.9%
VUI-21MAR-01 2 0.001% 0 0.0%
VUI-21MAR-02 5 0.003% 0 0.0%
  Excludes variant cases not linked to a known COVID-19 case. aCase number England genomic cases 31 March 2021. bProportion of sequences UK/England as of 31 March 2021. cDeaths As of 31 March 2021(within 28 days) with confirmed or probable VOC or total cases.

Enhanced investigations

Growth rates The growth rate estimates from a logistic growth model for variants of concern and variants under investigation (with sufficient data) are shown in Table 3 and Figure 4 (for those variants with sufficient cases). Growth rates are derived from pillar 2 (community testing) data only which does not include targeted sequencing for travellers in quarantine. Table 3 and Figure 4 show that the variants with significant positive growth rates compared to other circulating lineages in the same area are VOC-20DEC-02 (B.1.351), VOC-21JAN-02 (P.1), VUI-21FEB-03 (B.1.525) and VUI-21FEB-04 (B.1.1.318). The supplementary data for figures is available here.
Table 3. Growth rate of variants of concern and variants under investigation 1 January 2021 as of 31 March 2021
Variant Lineage Growthrate(1/week)
VOC-20DEC-02 B.1.351 0.16(p=7.59e-10)
VOC-21JAN-02 P.1 0.44(p=4.14e-05)
VOC-21FEB-02 B.1.1.7withE484K -0.092(p=0.047)
VUI-21JAN-01 P.2 -0.05(p=0.58)
VUI-21FEB-01 A.23.1withE484K 0.11(p=0.21)
VUI-21FEB-03 B.1.525 0.34(p=1.97e-10)
VUI-21FEB-04 B.1.1.318 0.32(p=0.00025)
  Figure 4. Growth estimates of variants of concern and under investigation 1 January 2021 as of 31 March 2021. (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F4. F4.

Secondary attack rates

Secondary attack rates are shown in Table 4. These are based on positive tests amongst contacts named to NHS Test and Trace by an original case identified with a confirmed or probable variant of concern or variant under investigation. Secondary attack rates are shown for cases with and without travel history. In non-travel settings, only close contacts (household members, face to face contact, people within 1 metre of the case for 1 minute or longer, or people within 2 metres for 15 minutes) named by the original case are included. In travel settings the contacts reported are not restricted to only close contacts named by the case (for example, they may include contacts on a plane linked by additional contact tracing efforts), leading to likely deflation of secondary attack rates amongst travellers compared to non-travellers. In addition, people recently returning from overseas are subject to stricter quarantine measures and may moderate their behaviour towards contacts. Travel history indicates, but does not confirm, where infection of the original case occurred. Secondary attack rates for contacts of non-travel cases with variants of concern or under investigation except VOC-21FEB-02 are not significantly different from that for contacts of non-travel cases with VOC-20DEC-01. No transmission events were identified to contacts of cases with VOC-21FEB-02. Secondary attack rates for contacts of those that have travelled with variants of concern or variants of interest were all considerably lower than those that have not travelled.
Table 4. Case numbers and travel status including proportion and secondary attack rate for 5 January 2021 to 7 March 2021, data as of 29 March 2021
Variant Lineage Cases in those that have travelled Cases in cases that have not travelled or unknown Case proportion have travelled Secondary Attack Rate among contacts of those that have travelled (95% CI) [secondary cases/contacts] Secondary Attack Rate amongs contacts of cases that have not travelled or unknown (95% CI) [secondary cases/contacts]
VOC-20DEC01 B.1.1.7 715(84.6%with,contacts) 98937(69.7%with,contacts) 0.7% 1.9%(1.7%-2.2%) [233/12055] 11.0%(10.9%-11.2%)[19671/178585]
VOC-20DEC02 B.1.351 102(64.7%with,contacts) 102(64.7%with,contacts) 50.0% 3.7%(2.6%-5.2%)[29/787] 9.1%(5.7%-14.3%)[16/176]
VOC-21JAN-02 P.1 5(100.0%with,contacts) 5(80.0%with,contacts) 50.0% Unavailable[0/86] Unavailable[1/8]
VOC-21FEB-02 B.1.1.7withE484K 1(100.0%with,contacts) 33(81.8%with,contacts) 2.9% Unavailable[0/96] 0.0%(0.0%-3.3%)[0/111]
VUI-21JAN-01 P.2 3(66.7%with,contacts) 30(76.7%with,contacts) 9.1% Unavailable[0/137] 11.1%(5.5%-21.2%)[7/63]
VUI-21FEB-01 A.23.1withE484K 0(0with,contacts) 62(61.3%with,contacts) 0.0% Unavailable[0/0] 8.6%(4.4%-16.1%)[8/93]
VUI-21FEB-03 B.1.525 85(69.4%with,contacts) 105(71.4%with,contacts) 44.7% 1.0%(0.6%-1.6%)[19/1882] 9.3%(5.9%-14.4%)[17/182]
VUI-21FEB-04 B.1.1.318 16(87.5%with,contacts) 31(74.2%with,contacts) 34.0% Unavailable[3/280] 3.6%(1.0%-12.1%)[2/56]
VUI-21MAR-01 B.1.324.1 with E484K 1(100.0%with contacts) 0(0 with contacts) 100.0% Unavailable[0/7] Unavailable[0/0]
VUI-21MAR-02 P.3 3 (33.3% with contacts) 1 (100.0% with contacts) 75.0% Unavailable[0/4] Unavailable[0/3]
  Secondary attack rates marked as ‘Unavailable’ when count of contacts is less than 50 or count of exposing cases is less than 20. Travel-linked cases for secondary attack rates are identified positively in NHS Test and Trace data using multiple PHE sources. A case is considered as being travel-linked if: 1. EpiCell or Health Protection Teams has found evidence of international travel 2. their NHS Test and Trace record mentions an event associated with international travel 3. their NHS Test and Trace record was created after notification via IHR NFP 4. they have been marked for priority contact tracing in NHS Test and Trace for reasons of travel Some travel-linked cases may be missed by these methods and would be marked as non-travel-linked or unknown. Secondary attack rates from NHS Test and Trace should generally be considered lower bounds due to the nature of contact tracing and testing. Data provided is for period 5 January 2021 to 7 March 2021 in order to allow time for contacts to become cases, hence case counts are lower than other sources.

Spatial variation in risk for variants

Spatial variation in risk The spatial risk surface is estimated by comparing the smoothed intensity of cases (variants of concern) and controls (PCR +ve, non-variants of concern) across a defined geographical area to produce an intensity (or risk) ratio. If the ratio is ~1, this suggests that the risk of infection is unrelated to spatial location. Evidence of spatial variation in risk occurs where the intensities differ. Ratio values >1 indicate an increased risk and values <1 indicate lower risk. Figure 5 highlights areas of significantly increased risks for variants of concern, areas of significantly increased risk were identified for all variants of concern other than VOC-21JAN02 (P.1). Supplementary data is not available for this figure. Figure 6 highlights areas of significantly increased risks for variants under investigation, areas of significantly increased risk were identified for VUI-21FEB-01 (A23.1 +E484K) and VUI-21FEB-03 (B.1.525) only. Supplementary data is not available for this figure. Figure 5. Spatial variation in risk for VOC data from 1 October 2020, as of 31 March 2021 (Supplementary data is not available for this figure) F5. Figure 6. Spatial variation in risk for VUI data from 1 October 2020, as of 31 March 2021 (Supplementary data is not available for this figure) F6.

Appendices

 

Appendix 1. Variant assessment tools

Repository of human and machine readable genomic case definitions A repository containing the up-to-date genomic definitions for all VOC and VUI as curated by Public Health England was created 5 March 2021. The repository can be accessed on GitHub. They are provided in order to facilitate standardised VOC and VUI calling across sequencing sites and bioinformatics pipelines and are the same definitions used internally at Public Health England. Definition files are provided in YAML format so are compatible with a range of computational platforms. The repository will be regularly updated. The genomic and biological profiles of VOC and VUI are also detailed on first description in prior technical briefings. Variant risk assessment framework Variant risk assessment includes the following confidence grading categorisations and utilises the framework in Table 5. 1. Low: Little or poor-quality evidence, uncertainty or conflicting views amongst experts, no experience with previous similar incidents. 2. Moderate: Adequate quality evidence, including consistent results published only in grey literature, reliable source(s), assumptions made on analogy and agreement between experts or opinion of at least 2 trusted experts. 3. High: Good quality evidence, multiple reliable sources, verified, expert opinion concurs, experience of previous similar incidents.
Table 5. Variant risk assessment framework
Indicator Risk assessment framework
Zoonotic emergence and transmission to humans Animal reservoir identified but no evidence of transmission from animals to humans Sporadic transmission from animals to humans Frequent transmission from animals to humans
Transmissibility between humans No demonstrated person to person transmission Limited human case clusters Established human to human transmission, which appears similar to wild type virus Transmissibility appears greater than the wild type virus
Infection severity Evidence of less severe clinical picture or lower infection fatality than from wild type SARS-CoV2 infections Similar clinical picture and infection fatality to wild type SARS-CoV-2 infections OR experimental animal data suggesting potential for increased disease severity humans More severe clinical picture or higher infection fatality than from wild type SARS-CoV-2 infections (limited to specific risk groups) More severe clinical picture or higher infection fatality than from wild type SARS-CoV-2 infections
Susceptibility and immunity – natural infection Evidence of no antigenic difference from other circulating wild type virus Structural data suggesting antigenic difference from other circulating wild type virus Experimental evidence of functional evasion of naturally acquired immunity Evidence of frequent infection in humans with known prior infection with earlier virus variant.
Vaccines Evidence of no structural or antigenic difference in vaccine targets Structural data suggesting difference in vaccine target epitopes Experimental evidence of functional evasion of vaccine derived immunity Evidence of frequent vaccine failure or decreased effectiveness in humans
Drugs and therapeutics Evidence of no structural or antigenic difference in therapeutic targets Structural data suggesting difference in therapeutic target epitopes Experimental evidence of reduced drug susceptibility Evidence of frequent drug or therapeutic failure or decreased effectiveness in humans
 

Appendix 2. Data on individual variants

VOC-20DEC-01 (B.1.1.7) This variant was designated VUI 202012/01 (B.1.1.7) on detection and on review redesignated as VOC-20DEC-01 (202012/01, B.1.1.7) on 18 December 2020. Genomic profile Lineage defining mutations are shown in technical briefing 6. In addition, VOC-20DEC-01 has acquired other mutations in some cases (Table 6).
Table 6. VOC-20DEC-01 (B.1.1.7) Spike mutations acquired in addition to the variant defining mutations 11 December 2020 to 10 March 2021. Percentages are the proportion of all sequences of of VOC-20DEC-01 (B.1.1.7) per time period with the mutation.
VOC-20DEC-01 (B.1.1.7) Spike variants
Amino acid change Total number of instances in VOC-20DEC01 (B.1.1.7)(UK data) to 31 March 2021 31 December 2020 to 30 January 2021 31 January 2021 to 27 February 2021 28 February 2021 to 31 March 2021
L18F 4943(2.57%) 1417(1.97%) 938(1.65%) 576(1.46%)
Q677H 1510(0.78%) 342(0.48%) 572(1.01%) 480(1.21%)
G142V 305(0.16%) 22(0.03%) 118(0.21%) 132(0.33%)
F490S 227(0.12%) 47(0.07%) 63(0.11%) 92(0.23%)
A475A 233(0.12%) 54(0.08%) 51(0.09%) 88(0.22%)
S680F 182(0.09%) 25(0.03%) 72(0.13%) 54(0.14%)
S494P 852(0.44%) 357(0.5%) 182(0.32%) 47(0.12%)
Y144F 435(0.23%) 148(0.21%) 126(0.22%) 32(0.08%)
L455F 76(0.04%) 18(0.03%) 17(0.03%) 28(0.07%)
A684V 81(0.04%) 22(0.03%) 19(0.03%) 25(0.06%)
K458N 29(0.02%) 1(0%) 0(0%) 22(0.06%)
Q677H(alt) 52(0.03%) 19(0.03%) 16(0.03%) 16(0.04%)
H146Y 99(0.05%) 20(0.03%) 40(0.07%) 15(0.04%)
E484K 96(0.05%) 37(0.05%) 34(0.06%) 14(0.04%)
F490Y 18(0.01%) 0(0%) 5(0.01%) 13(0.03%)
N148S 28(0.01%) 7(0.01%) 8(0.01%) 12(0.03%)
K150R 25(0.01%) 1(0%) 11(0.02%) 12(0.03%)
T678I 189(0.1%) 44(0.06%) 71(0.13%) 11(0.03%)
S12P 26(0.01%) 6(0.01%) 7(0.01%) 11(0.03%)
Q493R 26(0.01%) 3(0%) 8(0.01%) 11(0.03%)
G504S 16(0.01%) 1(0%) 5(0.01%) 10(0.03%)
Total VOC-20DEC-01 (B.1.1.7) 192,689
  International Epidemiology Lineage B.1.1.7 is dispersed across the UK. Confirmed cases are those identified by whole genome sequencing. As of 31 March 2021, there were 151,344 confirmed and probable cases of VOC 202012/01 (B.1.1.7) in England. The use of S gene target failure (SGTF) in the Taqpath assay as a good proxy for cases of this variant of concern has been described in prior technical briefings. In samples tested with this assay in the Lighthouse Laboratories, samples with SGTF have predominated since mid December 2020, reaching 99% of cases in the week starting 3 March 2021. Proportions in all regions were >97% in March 2021 (prior technical briefings). An online B.1.1.7 tracking tool is available https://covid19.sanger.ac.uk. Figure 7 and Figure 8 show the weekly number and proportion of England Pillar 2 (community testing) COVID-19 cases with SGTF among those tested with the TaqPath assay, and with S gene detection results, showing cases with SGTF account for more than 99% of cases from community testing nationally and over 96% in all regions. The supplementary data for figures is available here. International Epidemiology As of the 31 March 2021, there are 130 countries or territories (including the UK) reporting cases of VOC-20DEC-01 globally. Of countries or territories outside of the UK, 31 report, or there is evidence of, community transmission. However, for many countries the information available on the extent of transmission within the country is not clear. Figure 7. Weekly number and proportion of England Pillar 2 COVID-19 cases with SGTF among those tested with the TaqPath assay and with S gene detection results (1 September 2020 to 9 March 2021) (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F8. Figure 8. Weekly number and proportion of England Pillar 2 COVID-19 cases with SGTF among those tested with the TaqPath assay and with S gene detection results, by region of residence (1 September 2020 to 9 March 2021) (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F8.

VOC-21FEB-02 (B.1.1.7 cluster with E484K)

Through routine scanning of variation in VOC-20DEC-01 (B.1.1.7) a small number of B.1.1.7 sequences had acquired the spike protein mutation E484K. Information suggested more than one independent acquisition event. One cluster was predominant with evidence of community transmission and was designated variant under investigation on detection and on review redesignated as variant of concern VOC-21FEB-02 (VOC202102/02, B.1.1.7 cluster with E484K) on 5 February 2021. The genomic and biological profile is as previously described Epidemiological profile As of 31 March 2021, 43 genomically confirmed cases of VOC-21FEB-02 (B.1.1.7) have been identified; concentrated in the South West and North West (Table 7). Cases by specimen date are shown in Figure 9 and shows cases have not been detected since 1 March 2021. The supplementary data for figures is available here. This variant will not be included in future technical briefings unless a new case is detected. International Epidemiology As of the 31 March 2021, international cases have been reported in 3 countries and 5 sequences from the Netherlands have been identified on GISAID.
Table 7. Number of confirmed and probable VOC-21FEB-02 (B.1.1.7 cluster with E484K) cases, by region of residence as of 31 March 2021
Region Case Number Case Proportion
London 1 2.3%
North West 15 34.9%
South East 1 2.3%
South West 26 60.5%
  Figure 9. Confirmed and probable VOC-21FEB-02 (B.1.1.7 cluster with E484K) cases by specimen date as of 31 March 2021. Larger plot includes last 60 days only. (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F9.

VOC-20DEC-02 (B.1.351)

B.1.351 was initially detected in South Africa. This variant was designated variant under investigation on detection and on review redesignated as VOC-20DEC-02 (B.1.351) on 24 December 2020. The clinical risk assessment for VOC-20DEC-02 is shown in Table 8.
Table 8. Risk assessment for VOC-20DEC-02 (B.1.351)
Indicator RAG* Confidence Assessment and rationale
Zoonotic emergence NA Not applicable
Transmissibility between humans LOW Transmissibility does not appear to exceed wild type virus in UK (B.1.1.7) context (MODERATE confidence). Epidemiology which could be related to increased transmissibility has been observed in other countries (LOW confidence). If a selective advantage were to be conferred by increased population immunity, this may alter the current position in the UK.
Infection severity Insufficient information
Naturally acquired immunity MODERATE There is laboratory evidence of reduction in susceptibility to naturally acquired immunity from strains from the early pandemic (MODERATE CONFIDENCE) and epidemiological evidence of high levels of population immunity in SA when this variant emerged and spread rapidly, raising the possibility of reinfections. Systematic comparative data on clinical reinfections is required to raise the risk to red.
Vaccine derived immunity MODERATE There is laboratory evidence of reduced neutralisation by sera from vaccinated individuals, across multiple studies and vaccines. New evidence suggests the magnitude of this effect is larger for B.1.351, compared to P.1 or B.1.1.7 (MODERATE CONFIDENCE). There is clinical trial evidence of decreased effectiveness in humans for preventing mild to moderate infection (MODERATE CONFIDENCE); this varies by vaccine. However, the trials were not able to measure the impact on severe disease including hospitalisation and mortality (INSUFFICIENT INFORMATION for prevention of hospitalisation and death).
Drugs and Therapeutics MODERATE There is experimental evidence that variants containing E484K may have reduced susceptibility to some monoclonal antibody based therapies in laboratory conditions (MODERATE confidence).
Overall assessment of level and nature of risk, and level of confidence B.1.351 is a successful lineage in South Africa and is becoming successful internationally, including in Europe. It remains at a low prevalence in England. Monitoring is required as lockdown eases and the vaccinated population increases. There is increasingly robust laboratory data supporting antigenic distance between B.1.351 and older viruses, and there is clinical trial evidence of a reduction in vaccine efficacy relating to infection, but insufficient evidence to assess any impact on prevention of severe disease or death.
Epidemiological profile VOC-20DEC-02 (B1.351) is dispersed across the UK in low numbers. Confirmed cases are those identified by whole genome sequencing; probable cases are COVID-19 cases without sequencing, but who are contacts of confirmed cases. As of 31 March 2021, 410 confirmed and probable cases of VOC-20DEC-02 (B.1.351) were identified. An international travel link was identified for 258 cases, and 103 had no travel link. Confirmed and probable cases by specimen date are shown in Figure 10, and regional breakdown in Table 9. Figure 10 shows cases predominate in the London area. The supplementary data for figures is available here. Figure 10. Confirmed and probable VOC-20DEC-02 (B.1.351) cases by specimen date as of 31 March 2021. (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F10.
Table 9. Confirmed and probable cases of VOC-20DEC-02 by region as of 31 March 2021
Region Case Number Case Proportion
East Midlands 16 3.9%
East of England 45 11.0%
London 170 41.5%
North East 7 1.7%
North West 53 12.9%
South East 62 15.1%
South West 14 3.4%
West Midlands 31 7.6%
Yorkshire and Humber 12 2.9%
International Epidemiology As of 31 March 2021 there are 89 countries (including the UK) that have reported cases of this variant globally. GISAID (gisaid.org) includes data on sequences available internationally. As of the 31 March 2021 5,282 sequences of VOC-20DEC-02, excluding UK, are available from 59 countries/territories. VOC-21JAN-02 (P.1) First identified in Japan amongst travellers from Brazil, the P.1 lineage is a descendant of B.1.1.28. This variant was designated variant under investigation on detection and on review re-designated as VOC-21JAN-02 (P.1) on 13 January 2021. The clinical risk assessment for P1 is detailed in technical briefing 7. Epidemiological profile As of 31 March 2021, 27 genomically confirmed and probable cases of VOC-21JAN-02 (P.1) have been identified in England. 23 cases have been linked to international travel. Regional breakdown of cases in shown in Table 10 and cases by specimen date are shown in Figure 11. The supplementary data for figures is available here.
Table 10. Number of confirmed and probable cases VOC-21JAN-02 (P.1), by region of residence as of 31 March 2021.
Region Case Number Case Proportion
East of England 4 14.8%
London 13 48.1%
South East 3 11.1%
South West 5 18.5%
West Midlands 1 3.7%
Yorkshire and Humber 1 3.7%
Figure 11. Confirmed and probable VOC-21JAN-02 (P.1) cases by specimen date as of 31 March 2021. (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F11. International Epidemiology As of 31 March 2021, cases of VOC-21JAN-02 (P.1) have been reported in 38 countries or territories. Ten countries have reported cases of a Brazilian variant additional information is awaited to clarify if this is with VOC-21JAN-02 (P.1). GISAID includes data on sequences available internationally. As of the 31 March 2021 1,360 sequences of VOC-21JAN-02 are listed from 30 countries excluding the UK VUI-21JAN-01 (P2) First identified in Brazil, the P.2 lineage is a descendant of B.1.1.28. This variant was designated VUI-21JAN-01 (P.2) on 13 January 2021. It was first sequenced in the UK in November 2020. Epidemiological profile As of 31 March 2021, 53 cases of VUI-21JAN-01 (P.2) have been identified in England. 9 cases have been linked to international travel, and 40 cases had no travel link. Regional breakdown of cases in shown in Table 11 and confirmed and probable cases by specimen date are shown in Figure 12. Figure 12 shows a limited number of cases in different regions. The supplementary data for figures is available here
Table 11. Number of confirmed and probable cases VUI-21JAN-01 (P.2), by region of residence as of 31 March 2021
Region Case Number Case Proportion
East Midlands 1 1.9%
East of England 2 3.8%
London 14 26.4%
North West 11 20.8%
South East 6 11.3%
South West 1 13.2%
West Midlands 1 1.9%
Yorkshire and Humber 11 20.8%
International Epidemiology As of 31 March 2021, cases of VUI-21JAN-01 (P.2) have been reported in 32 countries or territories. GISAID (gisaid.org) includes data on sequences available internationally. As of 31 March 2021 1,558 sequences (excluding UK) of VUI-21JAN-01 from 29 countries. Figure 12. Confirmed and probable VUI-21JAN-01 (P.2) cases by specimen date, as of 31 March 2021. (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F12. VUI-21FEB-01 (A.23.1 with E484K) This variant was first identified in Liverpool, UK, derived from a lineage first identified in Uganda without E484K. The variant was designated VUI-21FEB-01 (A.23.1 with E484K) on 5 February 2021. It was first detected in the UK in December 2020. Epidemiological profile As of 31 March 2021, 78 genomically confirmed cases of VUI-21FEB-01 (A.23.1 with E484K) have been identified. The majority of these are residents of the North West of England (Table 12). Confirmed and probable cases by specimen date are shown in Figure 13. Figure 13 shows cases predominate in the North West with no cases detected as of the 23 February 2021. The supplementary data for figures is available here. International Epidemiology The are no cases reported internationally as of the 31 March 2021. GISAID includes data on sequences available internationally. As of 31 March 2021 1 sequence is listed of VUI21FEB-01 (A.23.1 with E484K) (excluding UK) from Netherlands.
Table 12. Number of confirmed and probable VUI-21FEB-01 (A.23.1 with E484K) cases, by region of residence as of 31 March 2021
Region Case Number Case Proportion
North West 77 98.7%
West Midlands 1 1.3%
Figure 13. Confirmed and probable VUI-21FEB-01 (A.23.1 with E484K) cases by specimen date as of 31 March 2021. Larger plot includes last 60 days only. (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F13.

VUI-21FEB-03 (B.1.525)

First identified as a geographically dispersed cluster in UK on the 2 February 2021. This variant was designated VUI-21FEB-03 (B.1.525) on 12 February 2021. The earliest sample date for VUI-21FEB-03 (B.1.525) in England was 15 December 2020. The biological profile is described in technical briefing 7. Epidemiological profile As of 31 March 2021, there were 277 cases of VUI-21FEB-03 (B.1.525) in England In this geographically dispersed genomic cluster with likely community transmission. Regional cases are shown in Table 13 and confirmed and probable cases by specimen date are shown in Figure 14. Figure 14 shows cases are in several regions, predominating in London and South East and North West. The supplementary data for figures is available here.
Table 13. Number of confirmed and probable cases VUI-21FEB-03 (B.1.525 by region of residence as of 31 March 2021
Region Case Number Case Proportion
East Midlands 8 2.9%
East of England 17 6.1%
London 86 31.0%
North East 2 0.7%
North West 60 21.7%
South East 62 22.4%
South West 11 4.0%
West Midlands 17 6.1%
Yorkshire and Humber 14 5.1%
Figure 14. Confirmed and probable cases VUI-21FEB-03 (B.1.525) by specimen date as of 31 March 2021. Larger plot includes last 60 days only. (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F14. International Epidemiology As of 31 March 2021, cases of VUI-21FEB-03 (B.1.525) have been reported in 39 countries or territories. GISAID includes data on sequences available internationally. As of the 31 March 2021 652 sequences of VUI-21FEB-03 (B.1.525) are listed, from 34 countries or territories excluding UK

VUI-21FEB-04 (B.1.1.318)

The VUI-21FEB-04 is lineage B.1.1.318 and was identified in England in mid February 2021 through routine horizon scanning for the development of new clusters of genomes containing E484K. This analysis identified an initial cluster of 6 cases containing E484K and other spike mutations, designated VUI-21FEB-04 (B.1.1.318) on 23 February 2021 Epidemiological profile As of 31 March 2021, there were 72 genomically confirmed cases of VUI-21FEB-04 (B.1.1.318). Cases have occurred in most regions of England, concentrated in London and the South Eastble 10). Regional cases are shown in Table 14 and confirmed and probable cases by specimen date are shown in Figure 15. Figure 15 shows sporadic cases in several regions. The supplementary data for figures is available here. Of the 72 cases, 34 were travel associated countries and 2 were contacts of travellers. 13 cases had no known link to travel. International Epidemiology As of 31 March 2021 there are no cases reported internationally. GISAID (gisaid.org) includes data on sequences available internationally. As of the 31 March 2021, there are 2 international VUI-21FEB-04 sequences, excluding UK. (Germany 1, USA 1).
Table 14. Number of confirmed and probable VUI-21FEB-04 (B.1.1.318) cases, by region of residence as of 31 March 2021
Region Case Number Case Proportion
East Midlands 7 9.7%
East of England 11 15.3%
London 20 27.8%
North West 9 12.5%
South East 14 19.4%
West Midlands 5 6.9%
Yorkshire and Humber 6 8.3%
Figure 15. Confirmed and probable VUI-21FEB-04 (B.1.1.318) cases by specimen date as of 31 March 2021. Larger plot includes last 60 days only. (Find accessible data used in this graph in Variants of concern: technical briefing 8 – underlying data.) F15.

VUI-21MAR-01 (B.1.324.1 with E484K)

First identified via horizon scanning of genomes with spike mutations characteristic of VOCs (including both N501Y and E484K) on 3 March 2021, the variant VUI-21MAR-01 (B.1.324.1 with E484K) was designated VUI on detection as VUI-21MAR-01 (B.1.324.1 with E484K) on 4 March 2021. Epidemiological profile As of 31 March 2021, there are 2 confirmed cases in the UK in a group of returning travellers, with links to additional unsequenced cases. Epidemiological profile As of 31 March 2021 there are no cases reported internationally. GISAID (gisaid.org) includes data on sequences available internationally. As of the 31 March 2021, 0 sequences are listed internationally of VUI-21MAR-01.

VUI-21MAR-02 (P.3)

The VUI-21MAR-02 (P.3) was identified on 9 March 2021 in a report of 33 genomes from the Philippines with 13 lineage defining mutations. This variant shares important mutations with Variants of Concern including E484K, N501Y and P681H. Based on genomic profile, PHE has designated VUI-21MAR-02 (P.3) on the 11 March 2021. This variant arises from B.1.1.28, the same parent lineage that gave rise to P.1 and P.2 in Brazil. Phylogenetic analysis of P.3 shows diversity indicating circulation prior to detection. Epidemiological profile As of 31 March 2021, there are 5 confirmed cases in the UK cases, of which 4 have recent travel history. International Epidemiology As of 31 March 2021, cases of VUI-21MAR-02 (P.3) have been reported in 6 countries or territories. GISAID includes data on sequences available internationally. As of the 31 March 2021, 91 sequences are listed internationally of VUI-21MAR-02 excluding UK. (Australia 2, Germany 3, Japan 1, New Zealand 2, Norway 2, Philippines 81).

Appendices

Epidemiological profile As of 10 March 2021, there are 2 confirmed cases in the UK in a single group of returning travellers. Two additional households note contact of which one has tested positive, sequence data not available. There is no current evidence of spread in the UK based on sequencing data. No deaths were reported. International Epidemiology As of 8 March 2021 there are no cases reported internationally. GISAID (gisaid.org) includes data on sequences available internationally. As of the 10 March 2021, 0 sequences are listed internationally of VUI 202103/01 (B.1.324.1 with E484K).

Sources and acknowledgments

Data sources

Data used in this investigation is derived from the COG-UK dataset, the PHE Second Generation Surveillance System (SGSS), NHS Test and Trace, the Secondary Uses Service (SUS) dataset and Emergency Care Data Set (ECDS).

Variant Technical Group

Authors of this report

PHE Genomics Cell PHE Outbreak Surveillance Team PHE Epidemiology Cell PHE Contact Tracing Data Cell

Variant Technical Group Membership

The PHE Variant Technical Group includes representation from the following organisations: PHE, DHSC, BEIS, Public Health Wales , Public Health Scotland, Public Health Agency Northern Ireland, Imperial College London, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University of Birmingham, University of Cambridge, University of Edinburgh, University of Liverpool, the Wellcome Sanger Institute.

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to those teams and groups providing data for this analysis including: the Lighthouse Laboratories, COG-UK, the Wellcome Sanger Institute, tthe PHE Epidemiology Cell, Contact Tracing, Genomics and Outbreak Surveillance Teams. Published: April 2021 PHE gateway number: GW-7909