‘3 hybrid variants in circulation’: NTAGI chief on XE, other mutant strains

Many new COVID variants are emerging from Omicron under the X series and currently, 3 new hybrid strains are circulating in the country – XE, XM and XJ. However, noting that there is nothing to panic about, National Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (NTAGI), Dr NK Arora pointed out that, “new COVID-19 variants will keep coming, however, the new variants aren’t causing severe diseases or increasing the number of cases.”

What do we know of Omicron X series

On XE variant cases reported in Maharashtra and Gujarat, Dr Arora told ANI, “Currently whatever has been described from India XE variant, it is only by the first layer of testing. So, one is having less confidence whether it is XE or whether it is anything else.  in the initial XE variant which was described from one of the states. Subsequently, it was found that it is either XM or XJ, not XE. So, it just shows that these variants with just one test it’s very difficult and particularly when new variants are coming.”

Dr Arora further explained that three layers of testing are required and INSACOG is closely monitoring, “So, what is happening in India wherever XE has been reported after first testing, whether it is Gujarat or Maharashtra the local testing has not shown any undue increase in the number of cases in those areas are in the contacts of the people, where this virus was circulated. So, the first concern that if a new sub-variant of Omicron is described, whether it is growing more rapidly, we are very closely following and INSACOG have so far not found anything, which is of concern.”

No need to panic:

On new strains, Dr Arora said,” variants will keep coming but at the moment these aren’t causing severe disease or increase in the number of cases.”

“So, I would like to tell people that these variants will keep on occurring. There is nothing to panic about. Because there is none of the variants is causing severe disease at the moment as per the facts and figures are given by the Indian data. Second is that whether any of these patients or their contacts had more severe disease, that is also not true,” he added.

(With inputs from agencies)

 

Subscribe to Mint Newsletters

* Enter a valid email

* Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter.


Download
the App to get 14 days of unlimited access to Mint Premium absolutely free!

For all the latest world News Click Here 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! TechAI is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.