Two Omicron sub-variants branded the most immune-evading yet are now being monitored by health chiefs.
The UK Health Security Agency has deemed BQ.1 and XBB ‘variant designations’ due to their rapid growth and fears over their mutations which enable them to better dodge protection from vaccines and prior infections.
Lab tests of positive Covid swabs have detected 735 cases of the variants in the UK so far.
Neither have yet been deemed a ‘variant of concern’ but the UKHSA raised concerns that the strains may ‘fuel future waves’ of infection. It urged people to ensure they are up-to-date with the Covid vaccinations.
It comes as data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) shows Covid infections are levelling-off in England, just six weeks into the most recent wave. One in 30 people are thought to be infected, up 2.5 per cent in a week.
Virus levels have been rising since mid-September and are now approaching a three-month high, with experts blaming new variants, the back to school effect and Britons returning from their summer holidays.
Infections dropped in Wales, while cases jumped in Scotland and Northern Ireland, surveillance data suggests.
ONS statisticians said the latest Covid wave remains ‘a mixed picture’ and it is ‘too early to say from the data whether we are seeing a turning point in the level of infections’.
Health chiefs last week credited England’s autumn booster rollout, which is targeting 26million over-50s, at-risk groups and health and care staff, for reigning in the virus.
But they warned of a ‘twindemic’ of Covid and flu this winter — with infections of both viruses peaking at the same time or one after the other — which would place ‘substantial pressure’ on the health service
BQ.1 is a sub-variant of BA.5, with the latter being behind around nine in 10 infections in Britain. The UKHSA said BQ.1 is now being more thoroughly monitored because of its ‘rapid growth’. The variant was behind 10.7 per cent of cases in the week to October 17, according to UKHSA data. It marks a 25 per cent uptick in a week, as the strain was behind just 8.6 per cent of infections in the week to October 10
Some 1.75million people in England (3.2 per cent) were infected in the week to October 17, up just 2.47 per cent on 1.71million in the week to October 10
Dr Meera Chand, director of clinical and emerging infection at the UKHSA, said: ‘It is not unexpected to see new variants of SARS-CoV-2 emerge. Neither BQ.1 nor XBB have been designated as Variants of Concern and UKHSA is monitoring the situation closely, as always.
‘Vaccination remains our best defence against future Covid waves, so it is still as important as ever that people come take up all the doses for which they are eligible as soon as possible.’
Dozens of Omicron strains are spreading across the UK but BQ.1 and XBB are the two that are causing concern.
BQ.1 is a sub-variant of BA.5, with the latter being behind around nine in 10 infections in Britain. The UKHSA said BQ.1 is now being more thoroughly monitored because of its ‘rapid growth’.
It has been spotted 717 times by scientists who sequence positive Covid samples to determine which variants are spreading. But the virus will be behind thousands more infections, as just a tiny fraction of cases are sequenced.
The variant was behind 10.7 per cent of cases in the week to October 17, according to UKHSA data. It marks a 25 per cent uptick in a week, as the strain was behind just 8.6 per cent of infections in the week to October 10.
Meanwhile, XBB was formed by two other variants — scientifically named BJ.1 and BA.2.75 — which have merged.
Just 18 samples have been detected in the UK. However, more than 1,000 have been detected worldwide and the variant was blamed for causing a recent spike of cases in Singapore.
The UKHSA said there is a risk of BQ.1 and XBB causing an increase in virus transmission in the near future, based on the rapid take of BQ.1 in the UK and XBB’s growth in other countries.
Researchers at Oxford University are studying how BQ.1 and XBB respond when exposed to blood from people who have been vaccinated and previously infected with Covid.
Results show that vaccines and immunity from previous infections are less effective against the strains, compared to previous Omicron strains.
The UKHSA said: ‘This suggesting that, as immunity begins to wane, these newly emerging BA.2 variants may fuel future waves of SARS-CoV-2 infection.’
It comes as ONS data shows that infections are flattening in England.
Some 1.75million people in England (3.2 per cent) were infected in the week to October 17, up just 2.47 per cent on 1.71million in the week to October 10.
In Wales, cases plunged 26.8 per cent week-on-week, with an estimated 86,100 infected nation-wide — equivalent to one in 35 people or 2.8 per cent of the population.
Meanwhile, 159,200 people in Scotland were thought to be carrying Covid in the most recent week. The figure is up 10.2 per cent compared to last week’s data.
Some 53,700 people in Northern Ireland infected with Covid, according to the ONS. The number is up by 21.5 per cent in a week.
Across the entire UK, 2.05million people were thought to be infected, broadly unchanged from 2.01 million in the previous week.
Some 1.75million people in England (3.2 per cent) were infected in the week to October 17, up just 2.47 per cent on 1.71million in the week to October 10. In Wales, cases plunged 26.8 per cent week-on-week, with an estimated 86,100 infected nation-wide — equivalent to one in 35 people or 2.8 per cent of the population. Meanwhile, 159,200 people in Scotland were thought to be carrying Covid in the most recent week. The figure is up 10.2 per cent compared to last week’s data. Some 53,700 people in Northern Ireland infected with Covid, according to the ONS. The number is up by 21.5 per cent in a week
The ONS data also shows that Covid infections began to drop in Yorkshire and the Humber, where 3.4 per cent of people were thought to be carrying the virus, and in the South West (2.9 per cent). However infections were on the rise in the North West (3.2 per cent), East Midlands (3.7 per cent) and London (2.8 per cent). The ONS said the trend was unclear in the North East (3.5 per cent), West Midlands (3.5 per cent), South East (3.1 per cent) and East of England (3.2 per cent)
Meanwhile, rates varied among different age groups. Virus levels fell among 25 to 34-year-olds, with 3.1 per cent of the cohort infected, and among 11 to 16-year-olds (1.9 per cent). The pattern was uncertain among all other age groups, the ONS said. However, infections are highest among 50 to 69-year-olds (4.1 per cent), the over-70s (3.7 per cent) and 35 to 49-year-olds (3 per cent)
Kara Steel, senior statistician for the Covid Infection Survey, said: ‘Today’s data show a mixed picture.
‘Though infections appear to have slowed in England and are now declining in Wales, they are increasing in both Northern Ireland and Scotland.
‘Infections are highest in those aged 50 and over in England, though there has been an increase in secondary school aged children.
‘It remains too early to say from the data whether we are seeing a turning point in the level of infections — which remain high across the countries.’
The ONS data also shows that Covid infections began to drop in Yorkshire and the Humber, where 3.4 per cent of people were thought to be carrying the virus, and in the South West (2.9 per cent).
However infections were on the rise in the North West (3.2 per cent), East Midlands (3.7 per cent) and London (2.8 per cent).
The ONS said the trend was unclear in the North East (3.5 per cent), West Midlands (3.5 per cent), South East (3.1 per cent) and East of England (3.2 per cent).
Meanwhile, rates varied among different age groups.
Virus levels fell among 25 to 34-year-olds, with 3.1 per cent of the cohort infected, and among 11 to 16-year-olds (1.9 per cent).
The pattern was uncertain among all other age groups, the ONS said. However, infections are highest among 50 to 69-year-olds (4.1 per cent), the over-70s (3.7 per cent) and 35 to 49-year-olds (3 per cent).
Despite concerns about the latest surge and the XBB and BQ,1 strains, Covid hospitalisations are falling in England.
Latest data shows 870 people infected with the virus were admitted into NHS care on October 24, down 22.4 per cent in week.
And the number of Covid patients in hospitals plunged to 9,131, down 12.1 per cent in the week to October 26. However, ICU admissions among those sickened with Covid increased 7.8 per cent, from 206 to 222 in the week to October 26.
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