Abstract
Monoclonal antibody therapy for the treatment of SARS-CoV-2 infection has been highly successful in decreasing disease severity; however, the recent emergence of the heavily mutated Omicron variant has posed a challenge to this treatment strategy. The Omicron variant BA.1 has been found to evade neutralization by several of the therapeutic monoclonal antibodies authorized for emergency use, while Vir-7831 and a cocktail consisting of monoclonal antibodies AZD8895+AZD1061 retain significant neutralizing activity. A newly emerged variant, Omicron BA.2, containing some of the BA.1 mutations plus an additional 6 mutations and 3 deletions, 3 of which lie in the receptor binding domain, has been found to be spreading with increased transmissibility. We report here, using spike protein-pseudotyped lentiviruses, decreased neutralization of BA.2 by several therapeutic monoclonal antibodies but that the mixture of AZD8895+AZD1061 retained substantial neutralizing activity against BA.2.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
CORRECTION: The data in previous preprint on #omicronba2 used an incorrect BA.2 spike protein that contained additional mutations. The data on evasion of mAbs by BA.2 are incorrect. Expts were repeated and manuscript was corrected. We apologize for the error.