VIRAL SPREAD

637 cases of new Covid variant detected in UK as two Omicron strains combine, scientists discover

MORE than 600 cases of a new Covid variant that combines two Omicron strains have been found in the UK.

Called “XE”, it may spread 10 per cent faster than the current strain but scientists said they are still studying it.

Advertisement
Covid is always evolving, and it's easier for it to do so when there is more than one variant in circulationCredit: Getty

There is no evidence XE is any more serious in disease severity, and Omicon variants have so far shown to be milder.

Booster vaccines are the best way to protect against Omicron, and the most vulnerable of society are being encouraged to get their second booster this spring.

Currently BA.2 is dominant in the UK and is fuelling a Covid surge. Around one in 16 Brits are currently infected with Covid.

BA.2 has a 75 per cent higher growth rate than other Omicron strains, including that which caused the wave over Christmas and New Year.

Advertisement

Growth rate is a measurement that reflects how quickly the numbers of infections are changing day by day. 

But the new strain is a combination of the two, and the UK Health and Security Agency (UKHSA) believe it is spreading even faster than BA.2.

XE is known as a recombinant variant, which is when the genetics of two strains jumble together to create a new version.

Professor Susan Hopkins, Chief Medical Advisor, UKHSA said recombinant variants are not unusual, particularly when there are several variants in circulation.

Advertisement

Most read in Health

FAT LOT OF USE
UK's weight loss obsession is actually damaging our health, experts warn
PAY & DISMAY
Fury as over £1bn spent on NHS hospital car parking charges in six years
NO RECOLLECTION
I woke from a Covid coma to discover I'd given birth to a baby girl
RAY OF HOPE
Deborah James’ fund donates £1m for cutting-edge scanner at cancer hospital

“As with other kinds of variant, most will die off relatively quickly," she said.

“This particular recombinant, XE, has shown a variable growth rate and we cannot yet confirm whether it has a true growth advantage. 

“So far there is not enough evidence to draw conclusions about transmissibility, severity or vaccine effectiveness.”

A UKHSA report said: “XE shows evidence of community transmission within England, although it is currently less than one per cent of total sequenced cases.”

Advertisement

It said XE has a 9.8 per cent growth rate above that of BA.2, and some 637 cases of XE have been spotted in the UK since January 19.

Israel warned of the XE strain earlier in March, saying it had found two cases there.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) warned at the time against European countries underestimating the dangers posed by the mixed strain, the reported.

There are two other recombinant strains causing concern, called XF and XD.

Advertisement

XF mixes the UK Delta strain and original Omicron, and is nicknamed “Deltacron”.

A small number of cases (38) have been found in the UK, but it has not been detected since mid-February, UKHSA said.

Meanwhile, XD has popped up in several European countries, causing several hundreds of infections, but at this stage has not been seen in the UK.

It has the “backbone” of France’s Delta, with the addition of Omicron mutations.

Advertisement
Topics
Advertisement
machibet777.com