A new COVID variant has recently been detected in several countries including the U.K., U.S., India, Australia and Germany.
Called BA.2.75, it鈥檚 a subvariant of Omicron. You might have also heard it called 鈥淐entaurus,鈥 the name of a constellation and given to BA.2.75 by a Twitter user.
The World Health Organization has classified BA.2.75 as a variant of interest, rather than a variant of concern. This means it鈥檚 being monitored but there鈥檚 not yet evidence it will cause problems.
The numbers of BA.2.75 infections are still relatively low. Most infections in the U.K. remain driven by the Omicron subvariants BA.4 and BA.5. BA.5 in particular is similarly dominant in other countries where BA.2.75 has been detected.
However, BA.2.75 is becoming more common in India (where it was first detected, back in May), suggesting it has advantages relative to current circulating variants. Some have noted that BA.2.75 is spreading in regions of India where it doesn鈥檛 have to compete with BA.5, but rather with the variant it evolved from, BA.2.
That said, some data from India indicates that BA.2.75 may have already peaked. And importantly, there hasn鈥檛 been a big increase in hospitalisations or deaths in India from BA.2.75.
Given this, BA.2.75 has quickly gained an additional nickname: a 鈥渟cariant."
As most of the global population has now either been vaccinated, infected, or both, variants which can infect people despite their immunity will have an advantage. So SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID) is constantly evolving to gain this advantage.
New variants which have mutations that evade our immunity will replicate and spread, leading to waves of infections. We鈥檝e seen this most recently with BA.4 and BA.5.
The memory immune system recognises infections based on molecular structures of viruses and other pathogens. Mutations change the molecular structure of each SARS-CoV-2 variant slightly, making it more difficult for our immune system to recognise and respond to the virus. This is often called 鈥渋mmune evasion鈥.
The concern around BA.2.75 is that is has picked up a number of mutations, which might indicate that this variant can evade immunity. But there鈥檚 no good evidence at this stage that BA.2.75 can evade the immune system in a significant way.
Most of BA.2.75 is structurally the same as Omicron and the original Wuhan variant. Although BA.2.75 has picked up a few mutations, it isn鈥檛 fundamentally a different virus.
The memory immune system will still act against BA.2.75, which is what we鈥檝e seen with Omicron. This immunity might not be enough to stop reinfection, but should reduce the severity of a BA.2.75 infection.
While there are concerns BA.2.75 could spread more quickly than other variants, we don鈥檛 have any clear evidence on this yet. It seems to have shown an increase which has levelled off or even dropped relative to a few weeks ago. If this is the case there鈥檚 a chance it might even fizzle out in another few weeks.
But, if BA.2.75 does have some immune evasion properties, it could cause another wave through the U.K. and elsewhere. Still, this would likely spike and then fizzle out like alpha, delta and omicron BA.1.
Thanks to vaccination, if we did face a BA.2.75 wave, we wouldn鈥檛 expect the level of deaths and hospitalisations seen earlier in the pandemic. But we know large numbers of cases can still cause significant disruption. And importantly, the constant wave of new variants is still a deadly threat to people who are vulnerable. So how do we overcome this?
One solution could be universal COVID vaccines, which would work against any COVID variants. The aim of a universal vaccine is to induce immunity against a very wide range of molecular structures. It鈥檚 akin to fishing with a wider net, making it harder for the fish to swim out of the way.
A pan-coronavirus vaccine is a similar concept but would likely try to induce immunity against the molecular structures common to all coronaviruses. As well providing immunity against new SARS-CoV-2 variants, a pan-coronavirus vaccine might also confer immunity against the next coronavirus pandemic. Some of these vaccines look set to move into clinical trials in the next few years.
A second solution may be to produce vaccines which induce better immunity in the respiratory system. These largely involve vaccines given through your nose, training the immune system to make more antibodies in the mucus of the nose and throat.
This type of immunity might help stop SARS-CoV-2 infecting and replicating at the point of entry into our cells, which could slow down the rate at which new variants have the opportunity to emerge. At least 12 of these intranasal vaccines are in clinical trials.
Right now, I would put my money on BA.2.75 fizzling out without a major wave of infections. But the next omicron subvariant, and the next pandemic, will inevitably come. New vaccine approaches might make us better prepared.