Today: 23 August 2025
20 July 2022
3 mins read

Moscow registers 5 cases of Covid-19 subvariant ‘Centaurus’

Earlier this month, the director-general of the World Health Organisation said authorities were aware of the variant and were monitoring it closely…reports Asian Lite News

Five cases of the Covid-19 subvariant Omicron BA.2.75, or “Centaurus,” have been detected in Moscow, the country’s consumer rights and human well-being watchdog Rospotrebnadzor has said.

“Five genomic sequences assigned to the BA.2.75 subvariant of the Omicron strain have been added to the VGARus (Virus Genome Aggregator of Russia) database.” 

Rospotrebnadzor said the samples were taken in July in Moscow, adding the patients all have a mild form of the virus and have not been hospitalized.

“Centaurus” was first detected in May in India and is believed to be highly transmissible.

Centaurus, which has the official designation BA.2.75, has been found mostly in India, although cases have been detected in Australia as well as the US, UK, Canada and Germany.

Earlier this month, the director-general of the World Health Organisation said authorities were aware of the variant and were monitoring it closely.

But WHO COVID-19 technical lead, Dr Maria Van Kerkhove​, said only now were sufficient samples becoming available to enable proper analysis of the subvariant.

“There are about 200 sequences available from about 14 countries. Our understanding of this virus is quite limited so far because we have very few sequences available,” she said.

Dr Michael Lydeamore, a research fellow in infectious diseases at Monash University, says centaurus is a form of Omicron, but with some unique mutations that distinguish it.

Omicron, he explains, refers to the high-level variant, which has undergone gene mutations to give rise to the BA.1 and 2, and BA.4 and 5 subvariants. “Those are called subvariants because you have the same high-level structure as Omicron but with a few extra mutations,” he says.

“Centaurus has the BA.2 mutations and then a few extra again, so it’s a kind of sub-subvariant.”

However, he says it is still not clear whether those extra mutations mean centaurus is more transmissible, better able to evade immunity, or produces a more severe illness.

“We’re seeing variants with high immune evasion become common in Australia,” he says. “But that makes sense because we have high levels of immunity in the community, so the only a way a variant can take off is immune evasion.”

He says the majority of Australia’s COVID-19 cases are now due to the BA.4 and BA.5 subvariants of Omicron, with a lower number of BA.1 and BA.2 infections.

Previous variants of concern such as Delta have now largely been wiped out by the family of Omicron subvariants.

It is important to note that centaurus is an unofficial nickname given to the subvariant by a Twitter user, and adopted by scientists and journalists alike as an easy moniker. Because it is a subvariant, WHO has not given it an official Greek letter such as those given to high-level variants.

Professor Nigel McMillan, program director of infectious diseases and immunology at Griffith University, says SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, does not seem to be following a “standard” pattern of viral evolution.

“What we would expect over time is that these strains get less and less problematic, with less and less clinical consequences,” he says.

“That makes sense from a viral evolution point of view because if a virus can keep you upright and walking around infecting other people, then it will spread much better.

ALSO READ-Colombo in talks with Moscow for Russian fuel

Previous Story

Showcasing timeless elegance of nonchalant glamour

Next Story

UAE, France vow joint action on food security

Latest from Asia News

Qatar: Syria’s stability key to region

Qatar, speaking for the Arab Group at the UN, urged unity and sovereignty for Syria as regional diplomacy, UN warnings, and fragile ceasefires highlight a precarious crossroads….reports Asian Lite News Qatar, speaking

Arab fury at Israel’s land grab

Arab League and world powers condemn Israel’s E1 settlement approval, warning it threatens a Palestinian state, breaches international law, fuels instability, and worsens Gaza’s dire humanitarian crisis….reports Asian Lite News The League

OIC calls emergency Gaza meet

The OIC prepares an emergency meeting as Israel intensifies its assault on Gaza City, calling up tens of thousands of troops, sparking global outrage and humanitarian alarm….reports Asian Lite News The Organisation

Pakistan’s $5bn LNG Gamble Backfires

The report says the Pak government locked into ‘take-or-pay’ contracts without demand guarantees, misjudging LNG price volatility and market risks….reports Asian Lite News Pakistan’s $5 billion investment in LNG infrastructure tied to

One Million Gazans Face Starvation

UNRWA: Hunger is spreading fast in Gaza. Women and girls are forced to adopt increasingly dangerous survival strategies like venturing out in search of food and water at the extreme risk of
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Backlash over celebrity party in Moscow amid Ukraine war

The Kremlin’s expansion of anti-LGBTQ laws in recent years, coupled

Discover the Magic of Moscow

Moscow is a city where past and present co-exists harmoniously.