Epidemiological and Clinical Features of SARS-CoV-2 Variants Circulating between April-December 2021 in Italy

Author:

Lai AlessiaORCID,Bergna Annalisa,Della Ventura Carla,Menzo StefanoORCID,Bruzzone Bianca,Sagradi Fabio,Ceccherini-Silberstein Francesca,Weisz AlessandroORCID,Clementi NicolaORCID,Brindicci GaetanoORCID,Vicenti Ilaria,Sasset Lolita,Caucci Sara,Corvaro Benedetta,Ippoliti Silvia,Acciarri Carla,De Pace Vanessa,Lanfranchi Leonardo,Bellocchi Maria Concetta,Giurato GiorgioORCID,Ferrarese Roberto,Lagioia Antonella,Francisci Daniela,Colombo Martina Laura,Lazzarin Samuel,Ogliastro Matilde,Cappelletti Maria Rosa,Iannetta MarcoORCID,Rizzo FrancescaORCID,Santoro Carmen Rita,Fraccalvieri Chiara,Testa Sophie,Carioti Luca,Rocco Teresa,Saracino Annalisa,Cattelan AnnamariaORCID,Clementi Massimo,Sarmati Loredana,Riva Agostino,Antinori SpinelloORCID,Zehender GianguglielmoORCID

Abstract

SARS-CoV-2 is constantly evolving leading to new variants. We analysed data from 4,400 SARS-CoV-2-positive samples in order to continue variant surveillance in Italy to evaluate their epidemiological and relative impact on public health in the period April-December 2021. The main circulating strain (76.2%) was Delta followed by Alpha (13.3%), Omicron (5.3%) and Gamma variants (2.9%). B.1.1 lineages, Eta, Beta, Iota, Mu and Kappa variants represented around 1% of cases. Overall, 48.2% of subjects were not vaccinated with a lower median age compared to vaccinated subjects (47 vs. 61 years). An increasing number of infections in vaccinated subjects was observed overtime, with the highest proportion in November (85.2%). Variants correlated with clinical status; the largest proportion of symptomatic patients (59.6%) was observed among Delta variant, while subjects harboring Gamma variant showed the highest proportion of asymptomatics (21.6%), albeit also of deaths (5.4%). The Omicron variant was only found in vac-cinated subjects, of which 47% were hospitalized. Diffusivity and pathogenicity associated with the different SARS-CoV-2 variants are likely to have relevant public health implications, both at national and international level. Our study pro-vides data on the rapid changes in the epidemiological landscape of SARS-CoV-2 variants in Italy.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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