Did COVID-19 become more lethal in 2020?

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Surprising_Shots on Pixabay
Surprising_Shots on Pixabay

COVID-19 may have become more lethal in the UK in late 2020 according to international researchers who conducted a statistical analysis of the lethality of the virus using weekly data on case numbers and deaths due to COVID-19 in the UK. The analysis suggests that the increase in the lethality of COVID-19 began before the alpha variant became the dominant strain in the UK, which the researchers cross-checked with Germany and France, finding a similar pattern. The researchers suggest that other factors including seasonality and pressure on health services may have also contributed to the lethality of the disease, rather than just the effect of new variants.

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From: PLOS

Peer reviewed                                            Simulation / modeling                                           N/A

U.K. study suggests COVID-19 became much more lethal in late 2020

Statistical modeling shows new variant may have been just one of several contributors to lethality

A new statistical analysis supports beliefs that COVID-19 became more lethal in the U.K. in late 2020, while also suggesting that multiple factors—not just the alpha variant of the virus that causes COVID-19—were to blame. Patrick Pietzonka of the University of Cambridge, UK, and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS ONE on November 24, 2021.

Studying how the lethality of COVID-19 has changed over time in different regions could help guide continued efforts to address this disease. While simple, preliminary evaluations of infection and mortality data suggest that COVID-19 may have become more lethal in the UK in late 2020, more rigorous analyses have been lacking.

To explore whether COVID-19 indeed became more lethal in late 2020, Pietzonka and colleagues employed a statistical approach known as Bayesian inference. This enabled them to draw statistically stronger conclusions about lethality from weekly data on the number of cases and the number of deaths due to COVID-19 in the U.K. Specifically, they used Bayesian inference to compare predictions from different mathematical simulations of COVID-19 spread and deaths, some of which incorporated increased lethality.

This analysis suggests that, in late autumn of 2020 in the U.K., COVID-19 did indeed become more lethal—meaning that the probability that an infected person would die from the disease increased.

Prior speculations hold that this increase in lethality was driven by the alpha variant (B.1.1.7) of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which was more infectious than previously widespread variants in the U.K. However, the new analysis suggests that lethality increased to a greater degree than the alpha variant would have accounted for, and that the increase in lethality began before the alpha variant became widespread.

These findings suggest that, while the alpha variant contributed to increased lethality in late 2020, other factors were also in play. Further research will be needed to identify those factors, but the authors suggest they may include increased strain on health care services and seasonality—a seasonal cycle in the severity of a virus that is commonly seen for other respiratory diseases like the common cold and the flu.

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Journal/
conference:
PLOS ONE
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Cambridge, UK
Funder: This work was funded in part by the European Research Council under the Horizon 2020 Programme, ERC grant 740269, by the Royal Society grant RP17002, and by Microsoft Corporation through a Microsoft Research Award for the project "Building an open platform for pandemic modelling". The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. J.P. Morgan Chase \& Co.~provided support in the form of salaries for authors E.B.~and W.P., but did not have any additional role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. The specific roles of these authors are articulated in the ‘author contributions’ section.
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