Within only three weeks after the omicron variant was first identified among Houston Methodist patients, this variant rapidly took over and became the cause of a majority of new cases. By contrast, the delta variant took about three months to reach that same milestone after initial detection. Causing 98 percent of all new COVID-19 cases by the beginning of 2022, omicron had infected 4,468 of Houston Methodist’s patients by Jan. 5.

In what is the first peer-reviewed U.S. study investigating omicron patients and their outcomes, Houston Methodist physician-scientists reveal that omicron patients are significantly younger, have increased vaccine breakthrough rates, are less likely to be hospitalized and have shorter hospital lengths of stay than patients with COVID-19 caused by the alpha or delta variants. Consistent with this decreased disease severity, patients infected with the omicron variant of COVID-19 required less intense respiratory support and had shorter hospital stays.

The findings of this study are described in a paper titled “Signals of significantly increased vaccine breakthrough, decreased hospitalization rates, and less severe disease in patients with COVID-19 caused by the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 in Houston, Texas” appearing Feb. 3 in The American Journal of Pathology. James M. Musser, M.D., Ph.D., chair of the Department of Pathology and Genomic Medicine at Houston Methodist, is the corresponding author on the study.

Compared to Houston Methodist patients infected with alpha or delta variants, the median age of omicron patients was 44.3 years, compared to ages 50 for alpha and 48.3 for delta; length of stay for hospitalized patients was 3.2 days for omicron, 5.1 days for alpha and 5.4 days for delta; and omicron resulted in 55.4% of breakthrough cases in vaccinated patients, whereas only 5.4% and 0.9% of vaccinated patients were infected with the alpha and delta variants, respectively.

As of mid-January, the researchers have also identified three patients with the BA.2 “stealth omicron” variant, which requires whole genome sequencing to distinguish it from delta and the original BA.1 omicron strain. These were the first three “stealth omicron” cases discovered in Texas.

Houston Methodist has one of the largest, most comprehensive SARS-CoV-2 virus genome sequencing studies in the country, analyzing the genome of every positive COVID-19 sample identified throughout Houston Methodist’s hospital system. To get ahead of the virus and detect mutations that affect patient outcomes, such as causing more severe disease or detrimentally impacting treatments and vaccines, Houston Methodist has sequenced nearly 80,000 SARS-CoV-2 virus genomes since the beginning of the pandemic.

Musser’s collaborators on this study were co-first authors Paul A. Christensen, Randall J. Olsen and S. Wesley Long with the Houston Methodist Research Institute and Department of Pathology and Genomic Medicine at Houston Methodist Hospital; Richard Snehal, Matthew Ojeda Saavedra, Kristina Reppond, Madison N. Shyer, Jessica Cambric, Ryan Gadd, Rashi M. Thakur, Akanksha Batajoo, Regan Mangham, Sindy Pena, Trina Trinh, Jacob C. Kinskey, Guy Williams and Jimmy Gollihar at the Houston Methodist Research Institute; and James J. Davis and Robert Olson from Argonne National Laboratory.

This project was supported by the Houston Methodist Academic Institute Infectious Diseases Fund and, in part, with funds from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, under


Source: Elsevier
Full bibliographic information
Signals of significantly increased vaccine breakthrough, decreased hospitalization rates, and less severe disease in patients with COVID-19 caused by the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 in Houston, Texas. The American Journal of Pathology. (in press Feb. 3, 2022) Paul A. Christensen, Randall J. Olsen, S. Wesley Long, Richard Snehal, James J. Davis, Matthew Ojeda Saavedra, Kristina Reppond, Madison N. Shyer, Jessica Cambric, Ryan Gadd, Rashi M. Thakur, Akanksha Batajoo, Regan Mangham, Sindy Pena, Trina Trinh, Jacob C. Kinskey, Guy Williams, Robert Olson, Jimmy Gollihar and James M. Musser. DOI: