New Type of Coronavirus Originating in Dogs Found, Finds Study
A new type of coronavirus believed to have originated in dogs was detected among patients hospitalized with pneumonia in 2017-2018, and may be the eighth unique coronavirus known to cause disease in humans if it is confirmed as a pathogen, a study said.
Researchers in the study,
published in the Clinical Infectious Diseases journal on Thursday, said their
findings underscored the public health threat of animal coronaviruses.
The researchers said they had
tested nasal swab samples taken from 301 pneumonia patients at a hospital in
the east Malaysian state of Sarawak. Eight of the samples, mostly from children
under 5 years old, came back positive for a canine coronavirus.
Further genomic sequencing found
that the new strain, named CCoV-HuPn-2018, shared characteristics of other
coronaviruses known to have infected cats and pigs but was mostly similar to
one that is known to have infected dogs.
It also contained a genetic
deletion, or mutation, that was not found in any known canine coronaviruses but
was present in human strains such as SARS-COV and SARS-COV-2, the virus behind
the COVID-19 pandemic. The source of the SARS-COV-2 coronavirus itself, whether
animal or other, remains unclear.
The paper's authors said the
findings indicated that the virus likely recently jumped from animals to
humans, but stressed that more studies were needed to determine whether it can
be transmitted between people.
They also said it was unclear
whether the virus could make people sick, noting that it was possible it was
merely "carried" in the patient's airways without causing disease.
There are seven coronaviruses
known to cause disease in humans: four that cause the common cold, and three
that cause the diseases commonly known as SARS, MERS and COVID-19.