BlackGoldAg2011 said:
Patentmike said:
BlackGoldAg2011 said:
yes, people are comparing strains
https://nextstrain.org/ncov/global

and no, there is no evidence yet to support a mutation to a less virulent strain
They are comparing the strains for people who get tested, and people are only getting tested when they show symptoms.
In other words, the way we're doing genomic testing and genome sampling would likely miss a less virulent strain.
which if you read what i read, I didn't say there was not a less virulent strain, i said there was not evidence to suggest that there was.
also, do you know for a fact these samples were only collected from symptomatic people? i don't see that stated anywhere. It is likely a fair assumption, but you are stating it like it is a known fact. besides, he didn't say an asymptomatic strain, he said less deadly. there strains causing symptoms and deaths are the ones being tracked in the numbers that are being used to compare the two areas, so they should be getting picked up in the genomic testing regardless.
Our disconnect appears to be over the word "evidence". There is very little experimental data on variants (one non peer reviewed report of variants being detected during cell culture passage from an infected patient). However, the serology tests suggesting infection rates 30-50 times the positive tests is circumstantial evidence that a less pathogenic variant may be prevalent in SoCal.
Put differently, do the serology results support spending more resources to look for variants in So Cal. If so, those results are "evidence" the variants exist...not proof, evidence.
On the source of sequenced samples, I am inferring from the shortage of tests that the sequenced samples are from symptomatic patients or those contact traced to symptomatic patients. That will change over time, but for now the inference is reasonable.
PatentMike, J.D.
BS Biochem
MS Molecular Virology