A coronavirus variant which was first found in Britain a few months ago is now ‘taking over’ and causing 98 per cent of all cases the UK, according to a scientist leading the country’s variant-tracking research.
As per a report by Reuters on Thursday, Sharon Peacock, director of the COVID-19 Genomics UK (COG-UK) consortium of scientists monitoring mutations in the coronavirus, said the UK variant, known as B.1.1.7, also appears to be gaining a firm grip in many of the 100 or so other countries it has spread to in the past few months.
“It’s around 50% more transmissible - hence its success in really taking over the country,” said Peacock.
“We now know that it has spread across the UK and causes nearly all of the cases of COVID-19 - about 98%,” she told an online briefing for Britain’s Royal Society of Medicine.
“It appears to be the case that the other variants are not getting a foothold in this country.”
The B.1.1.7 variant, first detected in September 2020, has 23 mutations in its genetic code - a relatively high number of changes - and is thought by experts to be 40%-70% more transmissible than previously dominant variants.
Peacock also noted data released on Wednesday from a UK study which found that B.1.1.7 has “significantly higher” mortality, with death rates among those infected with it between 30% and 100% greater than among those infected with previous variants.
“There is a small increase in the likelihood of death from the variant,” she said.
The World Health Organization says B.1.1.7 is one of several “variants of concern”, along with others that have emerged in South Africa and Brazil. The variants are mutant versions of the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19, which has already killed more than 2.7 million people in the pandemic.
B.1.1.7 has spread to about 100 countries, according to WHO data, and some of those, including France, Denmark and the United States, have reported swift rises in the proportion of their COVID-19 cases being caused it.
Peacock said evidence from the UK suggests B.1.1.7. is likely to become dominant elsewhere too.
“Because of its transmissibility, once it’s introduced, it does have that advantage over other circulating variants - so it is the case that B.1.1.7 appears to be travelling around the world and really expanding where it lands.”
Public Health England (PHE) on Thursday also said that a new coronavirus variant had been identified in the UK in two people who had recently been in Antigua. PHE said it shared some traits of other variants but was not classed as concerning for now.