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New Omicron spawn like ‘Centaurus’ and ‘Bad Ned’ may be the reason you have a weird summer cold (or worse)
Fortune · Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images

If there’s one thing we’ve learned from the pandemic, it’s that evolution isn’t necessarily a lengthy process that takes thousands, if not millions, of years.

It can be rapid and ruthless.

On Tuesday the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced that new(ish) Omicron subvariant BA.5, which swept South Africa this spring, had finally become dominant in the U.S. after first being detected there in March.

But there was no chance for the subvariant to celebrate, were it able to. On the same day, the World Health Organization tweeted a video about a new concerning variant surging in India—one giving BA.5, the most highly transmissible, immune-evasive version of COVID yet, a run for its money.

BA.2.75—dubbed “Centaurus” by some on Twitter—has already arrived in the U.S., the CDC told Fortune on Thursday, with the first of two cases identified on June 14.

It’s been located in approximately 10 countries so far, Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, WHO's chief scientist, said this week. It’s not yet been declared a variant of concern or even a variant of interest, and it’s too soon to gauge transmissibility, severity, and the potential for immune evasion, she added.

But some experts are already raising red flags—particularly the additional changes (as many as nine) it has when compared to Omicron.

No one change is individually concerning, “but appearing all together at once is another matter,” Tom Peacock, a virologist at the Department of Infectious Disease at Imperial College in London, said this week in a tweet.

BA.2.75 is “something we should all be concerned about,” Dr. Bruce Walker—director of the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard, a medical institute focused on eradicating disease, and co-leader of the Massachusetts Consortium on Pathogen Readiness—told Fortune on Friday.

The nascent variant “gives us insight into just what the virus is capable of, in terms of mutation. Here again is a virus that has resemblance to the original Omicron variant, but with minor amino acid changes has become something that is likely to be able to evade immunity.”

“I think what all of these variants are showing us is that the virus has not come anywhere close to exploring all of the evolutionary space available to it.”

A blip on the radar or a new global wave?

Whether BA.2.75 will cause a global wave or quickly fizzle—as did variants Lambda and Mu—remains to be seen, said Dr. Stuart Ray, vice chair of medicine for data integrity and analytics and a professor at Johns Hopkins Medicine.

“There are variants that we see sporadically pop up and have features that make us worry,” he said. “But until we see them out-compete in multiple settings, it’s hard to know what they’re going to mean for us.”